China plans greater power projection in Xinjiang and Tibet

China has outlined plans to enhance infrastructure in its border regions, including completing two highways spanning its nine land-border provinces, advancing an east coast highway, and upgrading three routes into Tibet. The initiative, which details policy priorities for the rest of the decade, focuses on improving connectivity and mobility in strategic areas.

China aims to project more power in Xinjiang and Tibet over the next five years through enhanced infrastructure. The plan highlights developments to improve connectivity across its border provinces. According to the South China Morning Post, China intends to complete two highways spanning all nine of its land-border provinces and advance construction of the National Coastal Highway along its east coast, linking the port city of Dandong near North Korea with Dongxing on the border with Vietnam.

The initiative also involves upgrading three highways into Tibet. One key project is the Dushanzi-Kuqa Highway in central Xinjiang, with construction starting in September and expected completion in 2032. Once finished, it will enable year-round travel and reduce journeys across the Tianshan Mountains to half or a third of the current time.

This route will run parallel to a strategic road built in the 1970s to boost military mobility following the 1962 Sino-Indian border war. Keywords mentioned include Galwan Valley, Line of Actual Control, Indian, Hot Springs, Liu Zongyi, Chinese, Kashgar, Shaksgam Valley, Delhi, Lhasa, Beijing, India, China, Xinjiang, and Tibet.

The plan outlines China's policy priorities for the rest of the decade, focusing on strengthening strategic capabilities in border regions.

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Leaders from China and Taiwan shaking hands with symbols of new economic cooperation measures.
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China unveils 10 measures to boost cross-strait ties after Cheng Li-wun's mainland visit

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China's Taiwan Affairs Office announced 10 measures on Sunday to promote cross-strait economic cooperation and livelihoods, following Kuomintang chairwoman Cheng Li-wun's six-day visit to the mainland, where she met Xi Jinping. The plan has been welcomed by Taiwan industries but drawn warnings from the ruling Democratic Progressive Party.

Beijing is encouraging private investment in critical infrastructure projects, including two major ultra-high-voltage power lines. Local governments in Xinjiang, Qinghai, Chongqing, and Gansu have issued notices seeking private investors for these projects worth billions of yuan. The lines are set to operate by the end of 2028.

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China's ambassador to Moscow has called for more transport infrastructure along the shared border with Russia to cut logistics costs and address challenges. He specifically suggested building a bridge on the Ussuri River near Raohe and referenced a railway bridge project from Tongjiang to Nizhneleninskoye.

One month after Jin Lei's appointment as Shenzhen's Communist Party chief, analysts are calling for Hong Kong to remove barriers to cross-border flows of people, capital, goods, and data. Jin has signalled deeper integration through visits to key joint projects like the Hetao cooperation zone.

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Chinese Premier Li Qiang has called for implementing a new energy security strategy, advancing a new-type power grid, and optimizing the energy structure to support high-quality development. He made the remarks during a field survey in Sichuan province from March 30 to April 1, visiting Chengdu and Deyang.

Hong Kong’s leader has pledged to align the city with national strategies in China’s latest five-year plan and turn Beijing’s assigned “new positionings, functions and missions” into tangible outcomes to drive economic growth. Chief Executive John Lee Ka-chiu said he would lead the government in uniting society to proactively align with the 15th five-year plan, which sets China’s economic and social development targets for 2026 to 2030. His comments followed the approval of the plan’s outline by China’s top legislature.

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China announced on Thursday a 7% increase in defense spending for 2026, the lowest rate in five years but still exceeding economic growth targets amid rising regional tensions. The move supports military modernization by 2035, with references to Taiwan. Premier Li Qiang highlighted improvements in combat readiness.

 

 

 

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