Ambassador: More prosperity, less terror
Afghanistan is eager for more cooperation with China in the areas of the economy, culture and anti-terror, the ambassador of Afghanistan to China said in Beijing this week.
Afghanistan and China have huge potential for cooperation in the fields of agriculture, mining, energy and education, Sultan A. Baheen said as his country prepared for national elections yesterday.
China has advanced technologies and expertise, while Afghanistan has huge resources. Building joint ventures in Afghanistan can benefit both sides, he said.
Afghanistan has "the world's best grapes and cotton," he said. It was the world's largest raisin exporter, but the war has damaged production: "We hope the Chinese enterprises could invest in Afghanistan to help us rebuild factories and explore international markets."
The China Metallurgical Group Corp (CMGC) and China's top integrated copper producer Jiangxi Copper Co. started work in Logar Province in July to explore and develop the vast Aynak Copper Mine south of the capital Kabul. The project, with an investment of more than $4 billion dollars, is the biggest foreign investment in Afghanistan's history.
"We also have rich resources of iron, gas and water which we can jointly explore," Baheen said.
A feasibility study has been done for a dam on the Kokacha River in northern Afghanistan. Also, the country has 300 sunny days every year, a rich resource both countries can benefit from after Chinese solar energy companies invest, he said.
Baheen said he will ask China's Education Ministry for an increase in the quota of Afghan students allowed to study in China. "We need lots of people who can speak Chinese to learn China's technologies, but up to now only 30 Afghan students have studied in China," he said. "I will try to realize the goal that 100 students can come to China every year."
The Afghan city of Herat and China's Shanghai formed a sistership in July, both cities shall make more steps toward more cooperation, he said.
"I also hope the Chinese enterprises can help us build an exhibition center in Kabul as soon as possible," he said.
Baheen said one strategy to counter terrorism is to develop the economy and increase people's living standards.
"We need more construction and support so that people can see the changes in their life," he said. "Prosperity brings peace."
Xinhua
(China Daily 08/21/2009 page11)