The Borneo Post

China’s billions set to revive Pakistan’s colonial-era railways

- By Ismail Dilawar & Chris Kay

JUST a pledge from China to help upgrade Pakistan’s train network has prompted authoritie­s in the South Asian nation to overhaul its colonial-era rail infrastruc­ture.

For software businessma­n Farrukh Malik, the change was palpable. As he clambered aboard the 22-hour express service from coastal Karachi to the northern capital, Islamabad, Malik, 40, said he’d been a passenger on the line since he was a child. “The introducti­on of trains like Green Line which has lesser stops and runs strictly as per schedule is a great difference,”’ he said as the train whistled to announce its 10pm scheduled departure.

Beijing is set to upgrade a 1,163-miles track from Karachi to Peshawar near the Afghan border with an $8 billion loan to Pakistan. It’s part of Chinese President Xi Jinping’s Belt and Road trade initiative, which includes US$60 billion (RM240 billion) of badly-needed works financed in Pakistan.

Though approval for the Chinese-funded upgrade has been delayed - amid wrangling over financing - Pakistan’s Interior Minister Ahsan Iqbal said in a statement earlier this month that the first phase of the work would start this year.

In the past decade, the nation’s rail network had become a byword for corruption, delays and filth. Now the unprofitab­le state-owned Pakistan Railways has doubled its revenue to 40.1 billion rupees (RM1.45 billion) in the past five years and aims to do so again over the same time period, Parveen Agha, secretary of Pakistan Railways, said in an interview in Islamabad.

“This is one of the biggest opportunit­ies for us,” Agha said. “This is the upgradatio­n of the entire railway system.” To help ease increasing congestion in Pakistan’s second-largest city, a US$1.6 billion metro-line in Lahore - funded by Chinese banks - is scheduled to open before this year’s vote. In total, Islamabad says it has rehabilita­ted more than 300 locomotive­s, over 1,000 passenger coaches, nearly 5,000 freight wagons and 31 stations. Pakistan also purchased 75 highpowere­d locomotive­s last year in a US$413.5 million deal with General Electric Co.

The drive is already attracting more passengers, up 25 per cent to over 52 million people since 2013. Working through the carriages, 40-year-old Rana Iftikhar Ahmad has been selling snacks on trains for last 15 years and said his sales have grown as much as 50 per cent in recent years. Five years ago a train from Karachi would take four days to get to Lahore, he said. That same route now takes just over half-aday on the Green Line.

“Things were so backward, now we are reaching our destinatio­ns on time,” Ahmad said as the train rattled along the verdant Punjabi countrysid­e. “Now more passengers are using the rail and so our sales have increased.”

The government is also eyeing increased freight trade. With national elections scheduled for July and with the economy facing headwinds due to widening external deficits, Pakistan wants to increase exports to China, Iran, Turkey, Afghanista­n and even arch-rival India through rail links, according to plans seen by Bloomberg.

 ?? — Bloomberg photos by Asim Hafee ?? Employees on a platform load boxes into a luggage coach of a Green Line Express train operated by Pakistan Railways between Islamabad and Karachi in Rawalpindi.
— Bloomberg photos by Asim Hafee Employees on a platform load boxes into a luggage coach of a Green Line Express train operated by Pakistan Railways between Islamabad and Karachi in Rawalpindi.
 ??  ?? Passengers look out from the coach windows of a standard economy class train operated by Pakistan Railways sitting at Karachi Cantonment railway station in Karachi.
Passengers look out from the coach windows of a standard economy class train operated by Pakistan Railways sitting at Karachi Cantonment railway station in Karachi.

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