A top Chinese envoy has warned Damascus’s new government not to support terrorism as a Syria-based Islamic militant group sent messages to Muslims in China’s Xinjiang region, urging them to wage attacks.
“The Syrian territory must not be used to support terrorism or threaten the security of other countries,” Geng Shuang, China’s deputy permanent representative to the United Nations, said on Tuesday.
Addressing the UN briefing on Syria, Geng said China “attaches high importance” to Syria’s drastic changes, and called on all parties concerned in Syria to exercise calm and restraint, refrain from actions that might escalate the situation, and prevent new conflicts.
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Who are the groups vying for control in post-Assad Syria?
Who are the groups vying for control in post-Assad Syria?
“It is imperative to stabilise the security situation,” he said.
But the ambassador reiterated China’s long-pursued non-interference policy in Syria’s internal affairs, saying Beijing respected the choices made by the Syrian people.
Earlier on Tuesday, Foreign Minister Wang Yi said at a symposium that China opposed terrorist forces taking advantage of the situation in Syria to create chaos, and would help Syria “safeguard its sovereignty and restore stability”.
Geng’s comment came days after the Turkestan Islamic Party (TIP) published a propaganda video encouraging Muslims in the Xinjiang Uygur autonomous region to wage jihad, or holy war, in China.
The video, published by Islam Awazi, the group’s official propaganda outlet, urged Muslims across the world to wage jihad “to elevate Allah’s religion and to live under Islamic justice”.