As I have been reporting for the past week.
https://gandhara.rferl.org/a/taliban-afghanistan-china-economy-/31440990.html
The Taliban says China will maintain diplomatic relations with Afghanistan and the new rulers in Kabul will rely on Beijing for economic support after the withdrawal of U.S.-led international forces.
Taliban spokesman Zabihullah Mujahid told the Italian newspaper La Repubblica on September 2 that China was the group’s “main partner” to halt an economic collapse and rebuild the country.
The Taliban has pledged to be more moderate since the insurgents toppled Afghanistan’s Western-backed government on August 15, promising to protect some human rights and refrain from reprisals against old enemies.
The United States and its allies have closed their diplomatic missions and conditioned any recognition of a Taliban government — as well as economic aid that propped up the previous government — on the group’s actions.
In particular, Western powers are calling on the Taliban to allow people to leave the country, enable access of humanitarian aid, make a complete break with international terrorist organizations, and respect human rights, especially for women.
Without aid, humanitarian organizations have warned of catastrophe as severe drought and war have forced tens of thousands of families to flee their homes. The U.S. government has also frozen Afghanistan’s central-bank reserves, helping to fuel a banking and payments crisis.
‘We Don’t Have Any Money’: Taliban Takeover Plunges Afghanistan Into Economic Turmoil
China, however, is unlikely to make aid and political ties contingent on human rights issues, preferring instead hard economic, political, and security interests.
“China is our main partner and represents a fundamental and extraordinary opportunity for us because it is ready to invest and rebuild our country,” Mujahid told La Repubblica.
Mujahid said the Taliban was interested in the Belt and Road Initiative, China’s global infrastructure-and-resource-development plan designed to tighten economic and political ties across dozens of countries.
“We own rich copper mines, which, thanks to the Chinese, will be modernized. Finally, China represents our ticket to the markets around the world,” Mujahid said.
Another Taliban spokesman said on September 2 that China had promised to keep its embassy in Afghanistan open and “beef up” relations, as well as increase humanitarian aid.
Abdul Salam Hanafi, a member of the Islamist group’s political office in Doha, Qatar, “held a phone conversation with Wu Jianghao, deputy foreign minister of the People’s Republic of China,” spokesman Suhail Shaheen tweeted.
“The Chinese Deputy Foreign Minister said that they would maintain their embassy in Kabul, adding our relations would beef up as compared to the past…. China will also continue and increase its humanitarian assistance especially for treatment of COVID-19,” he wrote.
Close ties between China and the Taliban could undermine the Western strategy of using economic leverage to pressure the new rulers in Kabul.
Russia, as well, has maintained its diplomatic mission in Kabul.
Relations with Russia are “mainly political and economic. Russia continues to mediate for us and with us to create the conditions for international peace,” Mujahid said.