ECONOMY — May 6, 2026

Afghanistan’s Mines Minister Presses Chinese Contractors to Fulfill Mes Aynak Copper Project Obligations

Afghanistan’s Mines Minister met with Chinese officials and contractors to address long-standing delays at the Mes Aynak copper mine, urging strict compliance with contractual terms. Company executives pledged to accelerate work and fulfill their outstanding obligations.

The Ehtebar Desk — originates with RTA — corroborated by Bakhtar News and Hurriyat2 min read

Afghanistan’s Mines Minister Presses Chinese Contractors to Fulfill Mes Aynak Copper Project Obligations
Image courtesy RTA

Afghanistan’s Minister of Mines and Petroleum, Mullah Hidayatullah Badri, convened a meeting in Kabul with Chinese Ambassador Zhao Xing and senior executives from the contracting companies overseeing the Mes Aynak copper mine. The discussions centered on addressing prolonged operational delays and the non-fulfillment of contractual obligations tied to the project.

During the meeting, Minister Badri emphasized that the responsible firms must strictly adhere to all agreed-upon terms and take immediate, practical measures to advance the development of the mine. He directed the contractors to align their operations fully with the signed agreement and ministry directives. In response, company representatives committed to accelerating their work and fulfilling their outstanding commitments.

While Hurriyat characterized the gathering as a summons initiated by the ministry to address stalling progress, Bakhtar News and RTA described it as a standard diplomatic and operational review. Regardless of the framing, all accounts confirm that the primary objective was to resolve bottlenecks preventing the project from moving forward.

The Mes Aynak copper deposit has faced significant delays since its original contract was signed more than eighteen years ago. Despite the long-standing agreement, large-scale extraction has yet to commence. The ministry reiterated its expectation that the contracting entities will now implement concrete steps to transition the project from planning to active development, ensuring compliance with all stipulated timelines and operational standards.

Read the original reporting at RTA

Reliability assessment

Three independent outlets corroborate the core event: a high-level meeting addressing delays at the Mes Aynak copper mine. The reporting is based on direct, on-record statements from the Ministry of Mines and Petroleum, naming specific officials and companies. Minor variations in meeting framing and corporate acronyms do not undermine the verification of the event.

The source language reads straight.

Across the newsrooms

Where reports agree

  • A meeting took place in Kabul between Mines Minister Mullah Hidayatullah Badri, the Chinese Ambassador, and contracting company executives.
  • The primary agenda was addressing operational delays and unfulfilled commitments in the Mes Aynak/Aynak mining contract.
  • The Minister emphasized strict compliance with contract terms and ministry directives.
  • Contracting company officials pledged to follow through on outstanding obligations.

Where reports differ

  • Source 2 frames the meeting as a summons initiated by the Minister due to delays, while Sources 1 and 3 describe it as a standard diplomatic/official meeting.
  • Sources 1 and 2 refer to the contracting company as MCC, while Source 3 uses MCCT (likely a transliteration variation or subsidiary reference).
  • Only Source 2 provides historical context about the 18-year timeline and lack of practical extraction.

Filed by 3 outlets

Filed under

EconomyMes Aynak, Mullah Hidayatullah Badri, Chinese Investment, Mining Sector, MCC

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