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China Eyes Minerals, Offers Afghan Taliban Tariff-Free Trade

President Xi said at a summit in Beijing last month that from December goods from least developed countries with diplomatic ties to China would not be subject to import duties


China's ambassador to Afghanistan Zhao Xing meets with acting deputy PM Abdul Kabir on October 24, 2024 (Pic: X, China Embassy Kabul).

 

China is striving to expand trade with the Taliban in a bid to gain access to Afghanistan’s considerable mineral resources.

Beijing’s envoy in Kabul said on Thursday the isolated Afghan regime could have tariff-free access to China’s vast construction, energy and consumer sectors, as the ailing resource-rich but diplomatically isolated regime looks to build up its markets.

Beijing has sought to develop its ties with the Taliban since they regained control of Afghanistan in 2021, but like all governments has refrained from formally recognising the group’s government amid international concern over its human rights record, notably appalling treatment of Afghan women and girls.

 

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But the impoverished country could offer a wealth of coveted mineral resources to boost Beijing’s supply chain security.

And selling Afghanistan’s lithium, copper and iron deposits to the world’s biggest commodities buyer would help the Taliban prop up their ailing economy, which the United Nations says has “basically collapsed”, and provide a much-needed revenue stream as the country’s overseas central bank reserves remain frozen.

“China will offer Afghanistan zero-tariff treatment for 100% tariff lines,” Zhao Xing, Chinese ambassador to Afghanistan, wrote on his official X account late on Thursday, above a photo of him meeting acting deputy prime minister Abdul Kabir (see above).

 

Plans for huge copper mine

Afghanistan exported $64 million worth of goods to China last year, according to Chinese customs data, close to 90% of which was shelled pine nuts, but the Taliban government has said it is determined to find foreign investors willing to help it diversify its economy and profit from its minerals wealth.

The country exported no commodities to China last year, the data shows, but Zhao has regularly posted photos of him meeting Taliban officials responsible for mining, petroleum, trade and regional connectivity since his appointment last September.

Several Chinese companies operate in Afghanistan, including the Metallurgical Corp of China Ltd, which has held talks with the Taliban administration over plans for a potentially huge copper mine, and was highlighted in an August feature in Chinese state media on Chinese companies rebuilding Afghanistan.

Chinese President Xi Jinping at a Beijing summit for more than 50 African leaders in September announced that from December 1 goods entering his country’s $19 trillion economy from “the least developed countries that have diplomatic relations with China” would not be subject to import duties, without giving details.

The policy was then repeated on Wednesday by vice commerce minister Tang Wenhong at a press conference in Beijing on the preparations for upcoming China’s annual flagship import expo.

The Afghanistan embassy in Beijing did not respond to a request for comment.

Last October, Afghanistan’s acting commerce minister told Reuters that the Taliban wanted to formally join Xi’s flagship “Belt and Road” infrastructure initiative.

Kabul has also asked China to allow it to be a part of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor, a $62 billion connectivity project connecting China’s resource-rich Xinjiang region to Pakistan’s Gwadar port.

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Jim Pollard

 

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China Denies Belt And Road Forum Being Shunned by The West

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Taliban Sounds Out China’s Huawei on Mass Surveillance Plan

US, Russian Envoys to Meet in China Over Afghanistan

 

Jim Pollard

Jim Pollard is an Australian journalist based in Thailand since 1999. He worked for News Ltd papers in Sydney, Perth, London and Melbourne before travelling through SE Asia in the late 90s. He was a senior editor at The Nation for 17+ years.