FM to visit Saudi Arabia ahead of MBS trip

Pakistan considers the visit of Saudi de facto ruler as crucial as it expects yet another financial bailout package


Kamran Yousaf November 08, 2022
Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto Zardari is addressing a press conference in Karachi on October 15. SCREENGRAB

ISLAMABAD:

Foreign Minister Bilawal Bhutto Zardari is set to undertake a two-day trip to Saudi Arabia from Wednesday as part of the preparation for the upcoming visit by Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to Islamabad later this month.

The Saudi prime minister is expected to visit Islamabad on November 21, according to official sources. In order to prepare and finalise the agenda, Bilawal will be visiting Saudi Arabia, sources added.

Pakistan considers the visit of the Saudi de facto ruler as crucial as it expects yet another financial bailout package from the kingdom.

Pakistan is hoping to secure $13 billion financial bailout package combined from Saudi Arabia and China in order to deal with the dwindling foreign reserves.

Finance minister Ishaq Dar said during Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s recent visit to Beijing, China assured that it would roll over $7.3 billion loan and provide an additional $1.5 billion.

Dar said Pakistan also got a positive response to its request from Saudi Arabia to provide $4.2 billion package. The proposed package includes $3 billion in safe deposits and $1.2 billion for the oil on deferred payments.

Read $10b investment deals likely during MBS visit

Saudi Arabia provided a similar package to the PTI government months before it was ousted from power. Riyadh has already rolled over $3 billion Pakistan was supposed to repay by December this year.

If both Saudi and Chinese packages materialise this would help Pakistan avert an immediate threat of default.

Besides the bailout package, Pakistan is also keen to revive the oil refinery project at Gwadar during the visit of the Saudi crown prince.

Saudi Arabia was to set up an oil refinery in Gwadar with an investment of $10 billion. However, the project could not take off due to a variety of reasons including former prime minister Imran Khan’s certain policy moves that angered the Saudi leadership.

But now Saudi Arabia is willing to revive the project. Pakistan is meanwhile pushing for Pakistan, Saudi and China's tripartite agreement for the oil refinery. It is said that China would provide the necessary financing while Chinese companies would undertake the project.

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