China to loan $1b for new road projects

Sindh CM says Beijing helping smaller provinces integrate into CPEC project


APP January 03, 2017
Workers walk past a road construction site in Beijing, China, October 15, 2015. REUTERS/Kim Kyung-Hoon

ISLAMABAD: China would provide about $1 billion in soft loans for three new road projects along the western route of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), connecting the “shortest route from Gwadar to China”, China Daily of Hong Kong reported quoting a senior Pakistan official.

Sindh Chief Minister Syed Murad Ali Shah said China would invest in new roads and factories to help smaller Pakistan provinces integrate into the project. “The eastern and western routes of CPEC should operate like two legs of a body,” he said.

Government releases Rs280b for development spending

However, more investment and opportunities had gone into the eastern route, where most of the country’s industrial and financial units were located, he said.

“The economically smaller provinces feel deprived and left out of the project,” he remarked. “CPEC is a national project after all and should improve the economy throughout the country.”

Shah was in Beijing for the sixth meeting of the CPEC Joint Cooperation Committee on Thursday last week. It was for the first time that chief ministers of all Pakistani provinces were invited to discuss industrial cooperation, he said. Peking University’s Pakistan Studies Centre Director Tang Mengsheng suggested that China and Pakistan both needed a top-level government body to run CPEC projects and facilitate interconnectivity in policy, infrastructure, trade, currency and people.

China says willing to promote CPEC with Pakistan

Chinese Association for South Asian Studies Director Sun Shihai said the western route development would ensure a robust trade network as the bedrock of CPEC’s success.

Published in The Express Tribune, January 4th, 2017.

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COMMENTS (4)

vinsin | 7 years ago | Reply @Truth: Gwadar port is for military purpose. Companies that operate from here will export to India, Middle East and African countries. Oil has no future anyway, currently Burma is used for transporting oil. Loans can always be paid by taking more loans.
Truth | 7 years ago | Reply China has begun its first freight train service to London from Yiwu, a famed wholesale market town in the eastern province of Zhejiang. The train will travel for 18 days over more than 7,500 miles (12,000 km) to reach Britain from China. It will pass through Kazakhstan, Russia, Belarus, Poland, Germany, Belgium and France before arriving in London. So China does not need Pakistan to reach Europe.China will also not use Gwadar for oil transportation since transporting oil is cheaper by sea route to East China where major Chinese population and industries are located. How are we going to pay back the loans.
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