The Phnom Penh Post

Pakistan, China debut trade route

- Gwadar, Pakistan

PAKISTAN’S Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif on Sunday inaugurate­d a trade route linking southweste­rn Gwadar port to the Chinese city of Kashgar as part of a joint multibilli­ondollar project to jumpstart economic growth in the South Asian country.

The Cosco Wellington, a ship berthed at the deep-sea port in Balochista­n province, was loaded with over 150 containers – the first consignmen­t under the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor announced in 2014, which aims to link the Asian superpower’s Xinjiang region with the Arabian Sea.

The $46 billion project is an extension of China’s “One Belt, One Road” initiative and encompasse­s a series of infrastruc­ture, power and transport upgrades that Islamabad hopes will kickstart its longunderp­erforming economy.

“The participan­ts of the pilot convoy who have made it to Gwadar are the harbingers of developmen­t and progress, that this region is to see soon,” Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif told audience members at a ceremony that was also attended by army chief Raheel Sharif and Chinese officials.

“Their faces gleam with the beam of prosperity that CPEC will bring about in the years to come,” he said, calling the first shipment a “watershed event”.

Pakistan recorded a 4.7 percent growth in gross domestic product (GDP) for the fiscal year that ended in June 2016, and Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif has set an ambitious target of 5.7 percent for the current year.

With its dusty moonscape and shining new port, officials have repeatedly suggested the city of Gwadar is another Dubai in the making.

But the mineral-rich province in which it is located is beset by violence from Islamist groups as well as insurgents seeking a greater share of the region’s natural resources and secession from Pakistan.

Security problems have mired CPEC in the past with numerous attacks by separatist­s, but China has said it is confident the Pakistani military is in control.

On Saturday, at least 52 people were killed and dozens of others wounded in a massive suicide attack at a shrine of the Sufi saint Shah Noorani, Balochista­n province.

The assault was the second claimed by Islamic State in the province in as many months, in what some analysts see as a a sign of its growing regional influence.

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