China holds first foreign ministers meeting with Pak, Nepal, Afghanistan on COVID-19
Beijing, July 28: Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi on Monday held the first joint virtual conference with his counterparts from Pakistan, Afghanistan and Nepal during which he mooted a four-point plan to contain the Covid-19 pandemic, boost economic recovery and resumption of the BRI infrastructure projects.
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Afghanistan's acting Foreign Minister Mohammad Haneef Atmar and Nepalese Foreign Minister Pradeep Kumar Gyawali attended the virtual meeting, according to a Chinese Foreign Ministry press release.
Pakistan's Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi did not participate in the meeting.
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Pakistan was represented by Economic Affairs Minister Makhdoom Khusro Bakhtiar.
Addressing the meeting, which is the first involving the four countries, Wang proposed the four-point action plan including consolidating the consensus on unity and fight against the pandemic, avoiding politicisation and stigmatisation of the coronavirus and firmly support the World Health Organization (WHO) in playing its due role to jointly building global health community.
Earlier this month, the Trump administration formally notified the United Nations of its decision to withdraw the US from the World Health Organization (WHO), breaking off ties with the global health body despite the raging coronavirus pandemic in the country.
The US has accused the WHO of siding with China on the outbreak of the coronavirus, which originated in the Chinese city of Wuhan late last year, alleging the health body misled the world resulting in deaths of over half a million people globally, including over 1,46,000 in America alone.
Wang said all the four countries should carry out regional cooperation on joint prevention and control of the pandemic drawing the experience of China and Pakistan, according to the press release.
He said when the Chinese vaccine is developed, China will improve the accessibility of vaccines to the three countries and help them strengthen their public health systems.
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Significantly,
he
also
proposed
post-pandemic,
the
four
countries
should
resolutely
support
the
joint
development
of
China's
Belt
and
Road
Initiative
(BRI)
by
promoting
the
resumption
of
work
and
production
of
key
cooperation
projects,
maintain
the
stability
of
industrial
and
supply
chains,
and
create
new
economic
growth
points
in
the
digital
field.
"We
will
actively
promote
the
building
of
the
China-Pakistan
Economic
Corridor
(CPEC)
and
the
Trans-Himalayan
Connectivity
network
(THCN),
support
the
extension
of
the
corridor
to
Afghanistan,
and
further
unleash
the
dividends
of
regional
connectivity,"
Wang
said.
The BRI is a multi-billion-dollar initiative launched by Chinese President Xi Jinping when he came to power in 2013. It aims to link Southeast Asia, Central Asia, the Gulf region, Africa and Europe with a network of land and sea routes.
While USD 60 billion CPEC is the flagship project of the BRI, over which India has protested to China as it is being laid through the Pakistan-occupied Kashmir (POK), the THCN aims to connect Nepal and China through Tibet.
"We should give play to our geographical advantages, strengthen exchanges and connectivity between the four countries and central Asian countries, and safeguard regional peace and stability," Wang said.
His remarks assume significance as it came amidst the border tensions between India and China. Pakistan and Nepal are also actively involved in building major infrastructure projects under the CPEC and the THCN, causing much concern in New Delhi.
The ministers of Pakistan, Nepal and Afghanistan"actively supported" the four-point cooperation initiative proposed by Wang and thanked China for providing medical material assistance and food support, and shared experience in epidemic prevention and control, the statement said.
All parties supported the maintenance of multilateralism, strengthen the role of the WHO, backed the realisation of a ceasefire in Afghanistan during the epidemic, and the peace and reconciliation process in Afghanistan, it added.
Bakhtiar, who represented Pakistan in the conference, stressed that the participating counties should develop political consensus against Covid-19 and declare a united front to combat it.
He said that Covid-19 had inflicted a punitive human and economic cost globally and disrupted the social and political architecture of the world.
"Pakistan was ready to both enhance cooperation in combating Covid-19 and in post-pandemic economic recovery with the participating countries," the minister said.
Bakhtiar said that the CPEC could play an important role in boosting regional growth and recovery in the post-COVID-19 period.
Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi did not participate but in a video message at the Conference, he stressed the need for unity, solidarity and multilateral cooperation to fight Covid-19 pandemic.