CPEC: an ill-informed debate

For a project as big as the CPEC, the nation cannot afford anything less than the utmost of clarity & professionalism


Editorial May 18, 2015
The debate over the CPEC has largely been marked by ill-informed rhetoric, in part not helped by the government’s strange inability to get the story straight at the very outbreak of the rumours. PHOTO: PID

Given the fact that it is worth $46 billion — roughly one-fifth the size of the Pakistani economy — one can safely assume that the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) will arouse considerable debate and there are likely to be more than one perfectly valid views about how the project should proceed. But the debate over the CPEC, both within and outside parliament, has largely been marked by ill-informed rhetoric, in part not helped by the government’s strange inability to get the story straight at the very outbreak of the rumours. In a nutshell, the CPEC will have three routes passing through Pakistan which will each create a north-south axis that will link the inland parts of the country to the nation’s ports. This highway system would be somewhat similar to the kind of axes that form the heart of the Eisenhower highway system in the United States. Given the fact that China is providing the financing for this project and that it wants the project up and running as soon as possible, the eastern route, which would pass through mostly Punjab and Sindh, is being developed first so that Chinese trucks can start moving through Pakistan as soon as possible. Punjab and Sindh already have the best transportation infrastructure, so the government feels the first Chinese shipment to reach Gwadar can probably do so in around two years.



Yet members of parliament from Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa (K-P) and Balochistan argue that the CPEC offers an opportunity to correct the historical imbalance of infrastructure in Pakistan, where the smaller two provinces are largely unconnected to the economic heartland of the country and the wider region. Up until that point, we agree with their stance, and we are inclined to believe that the government agrees with them as well. Where we differ from them, however, is the hysterical nature of their complaints even after the government has tried to clarify the fact that the route is not going to bypass any part of Pakistan, though some parts will be served before others.

We do believe that the optimal solution would have been to build the western route of the CPEC first. Roads in K-P and Balochistan are in shambles and railways are non-existent. The security threat in those provinces is the product of the sense of economic deprivation that is prevalent in those parts of the country. Providing that infrastructure would go a long way towards creating a unified and prosperous Pakistan. However, the government’s stance is not unreasonable: given Beijing’s financing and sense of urgency, the most viable route needs to be constructed first. That happens to be the eastern route, not un-coincidentally because it already has a significant portion of the infrastructure needed.

Having said that, we do believe that the mistrust and hysteria could have been avoided had the government taken the concerns about the potential changes in the route seriously at the very outset and addressed the allegations being levelled at it. It is no secret that the ruling PML-N is a very Punjab-centric party that, in the past, has occasionally come across as indifferent to the needs or concerns of people from other parts of the country. And while in recent weeks, Planning Minister Ahsan Iqbal has been vociferously denying any changes in routes and clarifying the government’s plans, he has yet to provide a concrete deadline on when the government expects the western route of the CPEC to be built. That lack of timelines, more than anything else, is what has critics of the project worried, and rightfully so. When the matter first came up for debate, Senator Farhatullah Babar of K-P raised a valid point: once the eastern route becomes operational, it will create its own set of economic interest groups that may seek to prevent the construction of the western route. The only way to prevent this is by signalling a categorical commitment to building both sections of the CPEC and announcing clear deadlines for both. For a project as big as the CPEC, and potentially as game-changing for the economy, the nation cannot afford anything less than the utmost of clarity and professionalism.

Published in The Express Tribune, May 19th,  2015.

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COMMENTS (2)

Usman | 8 years ago | Reply I completely agree that the western route should be constructed first.
Feroz | 8 years ago | Reply Is this an exercise in subterfuge or kite flying ? I doubt the Chinese have plans for three routes to appease domestic opinion. Wonder whether the cost of three routes as is being claimed have been budgeted for. This entire exercise lacks openness, clarity and accountability.
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