China's Xi Jinping to visit Pakistan, invest $46 billion
The Chinese President Xi Jinping is heading to Islamabad where he will unveil investments worth 46 billion dollars. The move is being seen as Beijing's attempt to increase its influence in Asia.
The Chinese President Xi Jinping is heading to Islamabad where he will unveil investments worth 46 billion dollars. The move is being seen as Beijing's attempt to increase its influence in Asia.
Xi Jinping, China's president was scheduled to launch 46 billion dollars worth of investments in energy and infrastructure on his visit to Pakistan on Monday.
"Pakistan, for China, is now of pivotal importance. This has to succeed," Mushahid Hussain Sayed, chairman of the Pakistani parliament's defense committee told Reuters news agency about the partnership.
China's ambitious CPEC corridor
Xi's two-day-long visit would include a speech in Pakistan's parliament and announcements related to the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), which would link Pakistan's southern Gwadar port (pictured above) on the Arabian Sea with China's western Xinjiang region. Pakistan transferred control over Gwadar to a Chinese public company in 2013.
The CPEC also included plans to create a road, rail and oil pipeline links which would shorten the distance from China to the Middle East. China would invest about 34 billion dollars in energy projects, Ahsan Iqbal, Pakistan's minister for planning and development told journalists.
"The real opportunity of this China Pakistan Economic Corridor is that it changes the scope of the relationship from geopolitics to geoeconomics," Iqbal argued, adding that the projects would have a "significant transformative effect on Pakistan's economy."
Islamist insurgency a big threat
However, the two military allies faced several challenges in the implementation of the project, the biggest being that of Islamist militants who were active in Pakistan's Baluchistan state. China was also worried about Muslim terrorists from its Xinjiang province joining hands with terrorists in Pakistan.
"China and Pakistan need to align security concerns more closely to strengthen security cooperation," President Xi said in an address to journalists a day before his trip to Islamabad. "Our cooperation in the security and economic fields reinforce each other and they must be advanced simultaneously," he added.
China's expanded investment in Pakistan is being seen as one of its attempts to increase its dominance in Asia and offset US and Indian influence. This is the first visit by a Chinese head of state to Pakistan in the last nine years.
In 2013, Pakistan's Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif visited Beijing to seal important energy deals. China's investment has raised hope among Pakistan's people, but first problems like jihadist violence and improving infrastructure need to be tackled.
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