Yahoo – AFP,
Issam Ahmed, 20 April 2015
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Chinese
President Xi Jinping (L) and Pakistan's Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif address
meet at the Prime Minister's House in Islamabad, on April 20, 2015 (AFP Photo)
|
Chinese
President Xi Jinping inaugurated a $46 billion investment plan in Pakistan on
Monday that aims to create direct links between China and the Arabian Sea and
boost the sluggish Pakistani economy.
Islamabad
and Beijing hope the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) will transform
Pakistan into a regional economic hub and bring growth to the restive western
Chinese region of Xinjiang.
The
corridor scheme is part of Beijing's "Belt and Road" plan to expand
its trade and transport footprint across Central and South Asia, while
countering US and Indian influence.
The
projected investments, $28 billion of which are due to be signed during the
course of Xi's visit, dwarf a US assistance package to Pakistan of $5 billion
that began in 2010 but has made less impact than hoped.
They
foresee the creation of road, rail and pipeline links that will connect China
to the Arabian Sea, cutting several thousand kilometres off the route that
transports oil from the Middle East.
The upgrade
will stretch 3,000 kilometres (1,860 miles) from China's western city of
Kashgar to the Pakistani port of Gwadar, control of which was transferred to a
Chinese public company in 2013.
Ahsan
Iqbal, the minister overseeing the projects, said $11 billion has been set
aside for infrastructure work, while the remaining $35 billion will go on
energy projects. Much of the investment will be in the form of discounted loans.
'Regional
hub'
After a
lavish airport reception and afternoon talks, Xi and Sharif symbolically broke
ground on five renewable energy projects around the country via video link
before overseeing the signing of more than 50 agreements.
Xi said
China was ready to "support Pakistan's economic and social
development", while Sharif said the corridor would make Pakistan a
"regional hub and a pivot for commerce and investment".
"It
will also enable China to create a shorter and cheaper route for trade and
investment with south, central and west Asia and Middle East and Africa,"
Sharif said.
Pakistan, a
Muslim-majority country of 200 million that has been battling an Islamist
insurgency for over a decade, hopes the Chinese investment will spur its
long-underperforming economy, which the IMF projects to grow 4.3 percent this
year.
The two allies have enjoyed close diplomatic and military relations for decades, though economic ties have only grown more recently. Bilateral trade crossed $12 billion last year compared to only $2 billion a decade earlier.
Iqbal said
there were drawbacks associated with recent US aid, provided under the
Kerry-Lugar-Berman Act (KLB).
"KLB
was $1.5 billion per year, out of which only $600-700 million went to
government. Most of it went to non-government sectors and the bulk went to
American companies," he said.
"That
is a problem with assistance that comes through the aid mode."
Andrew
Small, author of "The China-Pakistan Axis", a new book on the two
countries' relations, said that for Beijing, the corridor project offers a
means of driving growth in China's interior and helping stabilise Xinjiang at a
time when fears of militancy are growing.
Opening up
the Arabian Sea also diversifies China's maritime trade routes, reducing what
Beijing sees as to be vulnerabilities in specific choke-points such as the
Malacca Straits, Small told AFP.
Power,
security
The plans
also envisage gas, coal and solar projects, aimed at providing 16,400 megawatts
of electricity.
Pakistan
has wrestled with chronic power shortages in recent years that have scrubbed
several points off GDP growth and inflicted misery on the everyday lives of its
citizens.
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Pakistan
has wrestled with chronic
power shortages in recent years that
have stymied
economic growth (AFP
Photo/Farooq Naeem)
|
But some
analysts have warned that the government has its work cut out turning the
infrastructure projects into reality -- particularly in Baluchistan province,
where a separatist insurgency has raged for a decade.
"I
just hope that Beijing's big-ticket projects are matched by Islamabad's clear
commitment and action on the ground," said Sherry Rehman, an opposition
lawmaker and director of the Jinnah Institute think tank.
Questions
of regional security will also be high on the list during discussions between
the two leaders.
China is
wary of the infiltration of militant Islamists from Pakistan to Xinjiang and
may be looking from greater assurances from Islamabad on the matter.
Xi hailed
Pakistan's efforts to tackle militancy and reiterated China's willingness to
support the Afghan government in reconciling with the Taliban.
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