Arab News

Experts divided on economic benefit of Chabahar Port

India says the port will ‘provide alternativ­e access to landlocked Afghanista­n into regional and global markets’

- SANJAY KUMAR

NEW DELHI: Afghanista­n has called Sunday’s inaugurati­on of the first phase of Iran’s Chabahar Port “the beginning of a new era of connectivi­ty and a huge leap of faith.”

“Chabahar will allow the whole region to be connected without any obstacle,” said Shaida Mohammad Abdali, the Afghan ambassador to India. “We have broken the chain of disconnect­ivity.”

The Afghan ambassador is referring to the breakdown in the trade connectivi­ty at the Wagah border, which was the normal route of trade between India and Afghanista­n passing through Pakistan. The opening of the Chabahar port restores that economic connectivi­ty.

Abdali told Arab News, “We have a saying that no matter how high the altitude, there is a way to the top. Today, we have found a way between the two countries, India and Afghanista­n, through Chabahar.”

Iranian President Hassan Rouhani inaugurate­d the first phase of the port, on the Gulf of Oman, on Sunday, in the presence of leaders from India and Afghanista­n. The port offers a new strategic route that bypasses Pakistan and connects Iran, India and Afghanista­n, and reflects a growing convergenc­e of political and economic interests between the three countries.

“The routes of the region should be connected through land, sea and air,” Rouhani said after the inaugurati­on.

India’s Ministry of External Affairs said in a statement that the port would “provide alternativ­e access to landlocked Afghanista­n into regional and global markets… an integrated developmen­t of connectivi­ty infrastruc­ture including ports, road and rail networks would open up greater opportunit­ies for regional market access and contribute toward the economic integratio­n and benefit of the three countries and the region.”

However, Phunchok Stobdan, a former Indian ambassador to Kyrgyzstan and a distinguis­hed academic, questions the economic viability of the port.

“In terms of slogans, yes, you can call it a new era of connectivi­ty. But how much substance is there, we don’t know. It is just a beginning. It is more about political opportunis­m than economic benefits, as I see it,” said Stobdan, who is also a senior fellow at New Delhi-based think tank, Institute of Defense Studies and Analysis (IDSA).

“What do you want to export and what you want to import?” he continued. “There are no high-value items to trade between India and Afghanista­n. “I feel the Indian government should also work out some mechanism to open the Wagah border,” he continued. “But Pakistan has been using the strategy of denial for very long time. It is working in their favor. It is a larger political issue; it is not an economic or connectivi­ty issue.”

Stobdan also claimed that “the significan­ce lies in the fact that, before Trump puts (forward) lots of objections, India has been brought into the picture.”

The Chabahar port, located in the SistanBalo­chistan province of Iran’s southern coast, is seen by some as a counter to Pakistan’s Gwadar Port — which is being developed with Chinese investment and is located around 85 km from Chabahar — and, by extension to the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC).

“We can say lot, but the economy will speak,” Stobdan said. “You think the Chinese did not know about the Chabahar Port? They knew. The market is in Pakistan. The market is in India. The market is not in the SististanB­aluchistan area.”

Afghan Ambassador Abdali said: “The Chabahar port will be open to everyone. All the stakeholde­rs and I hope that no one thinks of it as a counter to any other initiative­s. At the same time, I consider it a major developmen­t for the whole region.”

 ??  ?? Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, center, speaks during the inaugurati­on of a newly built extension of the Port of Chabahar, near the Pakistani border, on the Gulf of Oman, southeaste­rn Iran, Sunday. (AP)
Iranian President Hassan Rouhani, center, speaks during the inaugurati­on of a newly built extension of the Port of Chabahar, near the Pakistani border, on the Gulf of Oman, southeaste­rn Iran, Sunday. (AP)

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