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Opinion | Why jihadists of the world won’t unite against Chinese action in Xinjiang

  • China declines to designate militant groups like Hezbollah and Hamas as terrorist organisations, despite Western insistence on the same
  • In seeking an antidote to Western antagonism, these groups are inclined to stay silent on Xinjiang and keep Beijing on their side

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Police officers stand guard in the old city in Kashgar, in Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, China, on May 3, 2021. Photo: Reuters
In recent years, China has found itself in the cross hairs of jihadist groups. When a suicide bomber attacked a mosque in northern Afghanistan last year, Islamic State Khorasan linked the attack to China’s repressive actions against Uygur Muslims. This comes on top of the attacks that Uygur militants under the umbrella of the East Turkestan Islamic Movement have launched on Chinese. Could China be in danger of becoming the next big jihadist target globally?
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At the same time, the animosity towards China is by no means unanimous among the world’s militant groups. In 2020, for instance, Hassan Nasrallah, head of the Lebanese Shiite group Hezbollah, called for closer relations with the Asian superpower.

Back in 2019, Hamas, the Palestinian militant group proscribed by many Western actors as a terrorist organisation, praised China for its stance on the Israeli demolition of Palestinian homes in Jerusalem. Moreover, China declines to designate either of the two groups as terrorist organisations, despite Western insistence on the same.

Clearly, China has different relations with different Jihadist groups. Some of the main motivating factors behind China’s stance on groups like Hezbollah and Hamas include trade and anti-US posturing.

In the case of Hezbollah and Lebanon, the fact that two Lebanese ports in the cities of Tripoli and Beirut are well placed to connect the Middle East to Europe makes the country an attractive place for Chinese investment.

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This is mainly to facilitate its ambitious Belt and Road Initiative, which connects China to different parts of the world. Thus, Beijing has shown an interest in investing in major infrastructure projects in Lebanon including railway construction and port development to achieve its aims.
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