Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Chinese, Saudi troops march in Pakistan Day military parade

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Chinese, Saudi and Turkish troops for the first time joined the Pakistan Day parade in the capital Islamabad on Thursday, in a sign of deepening ties.

Before Pakistan showed off long-range rockets, tanks and other military hardware, armed Chinese troops marched past Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif and General Qamar Javed Bajwa, the chief of Pakistan’s powerful military.

Pakistan President Mamnoon Hussain said it was the first time Chinese troops participat­ed in a parade in a foreign country, terming it a “historic event”, with the two countries embarking on building vast infrastruc­ture together.

Soldiers from Saudi Arabia, a long-time Pakistan ally, also joined the parade, as did a military band from Turkey, another largely Muslim nation that has strengthen­ed ties with nucleararm­ed Pakistan in recent years.

Islamabad considers China an “all-weather friend” and in recent years the countries have grown even closer on the back of the $57 billion China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), a Beijing-funded network of road, rail and pipelines that will link western China with Pakistan’s Arabian Sea port of Gwadar.

The militaries of the two countries have in recent years also increased cooperatio­n, with Chinese officials urging Pakistan to do more to improve security to help CPEC work.

China has long pressed Pakistan to do more to rein in Islamist militants, saying they have connection­s with extremists and separatist­s in China’s Xinjiang. The US also has a strategic relationsh­ip with Pakistan, but the ties appear transactio­nal at times. REUTERS

 ?? REUTERS FILE ?? Tibetan spiritual leader The Dalai Lama
REUTERS FILE Tibetan spiritual leader The Dalai Lama

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