China urges Afghanistan, Pakistan to resolve tensions via talks, not force

A Taliban security personnel stands as smoke rises from the site after overnight Pakistani airstrikes hit oil depots for commercial airlines, near the Kandahar airport in the Daman district of Kandahar province on March 13, 2026. (AFP)
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Updated 14 March 2026
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China urges Afghanistan, Pakistan to resolve tensions via talks, not force

  • Pakistan on Friday bombed fuel depot of private airline Kam Air near ‌Kandahar, stepping up the conflict
  • Wang Yi urges ​both ‌sides ⁠to hold face-to-face talks as soon as possible, and address differences through dialogue

SHANGHAI: ‌Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi told his Afghan counterpart Amir Khan ​Muttaqi in a phone call that disputes between Afghanistan and Pakistan should be resolved through dialogue and consultation, not force, the foreign ministry said in a statement ‌published on ‌Friday.

Wang urged ​both ‌sides ⁠to ​remain calm ⁠and exercise restraint, hold face-to-face talks as soon as possible, seek an immediate ceasefire and address differences through dialogue, according to the statement.

The ⁠further use of force ‌would ‌only complicate the situation and ​intensify tensions, ‌Wang said.

The ministry’s statement ‌came after Pakistan on Friday bombed the fuel depot of private airline Kam Air near Afghanistan’s ‌Kandahar airport, stepping up the neighbors’ worst conflict in ⁠years, ⁠despite China’s efforts to mediate.

Wang and Muttaqi also exchanged views on the situation in Iran, the statement said.

Wang told Muttaqi, according to the statement, that Beijing is willing to work with the international community, ​including Afghanistan, to ​bring peace to Iran.