China denies holding talks with Baloch militants to safeguard CPEC

BEIJING – China refuted a report on Thursday that it is secretly holding talks with Baloch militants in Pakistan for more than five years to protect its $60 billion CPEC, and hoped that Islamabad will step up security for the ambitious project.

“I have never heard the report mentioned by you,” Chinese foreign ministry spokesperson Geng Shuang said at a media briefing when asked about the report by British newspaper Financial Times.

Quoting three officials, the daily said China had been in direct contact with militants in the south-western province, where many of the scheme’s most important projects are located.

The 3,000-km-long CPEC is aimed at connecting China and Pakistan with rail, road, pipelines and optical cable fiber network.

It connects China’s Xinjiang province with Pakistan’s Gwadar port in the volatile Balochistan where Baloch nationalists have staged a number of attacks.

Pakistan army has raised a special force to protect thousands of Chinese nationals working on different projects.

Refuting the Financial Times story, Geng said, “I want to emphasise that the China and Pakistan governments have maintained consultation on the security of CPEC. Pakistan has taken a series of measures on this effectively safeguard the security CPEC and Chinese citizens. China highly appreciates this.”

“We hope and believe that Pakistan will continue to step up relevant work and maintain and ensure the security of CPEC,” he said.

The reported direct approach by China was seen as a marked departure from its stated policy of not interfering in internal affairs of other countries.

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