Arab Times

Pakistan to sign economic zone deal with China

Japan, US, China among few nations leading innovation­s like 3D-printing

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QUETTA, Pakistan, Nov 11, (AFP): Pakistan’s poorest province is set to sign a deal with China Wednesday allotting thousands of acres of land for Beijing to develop a massive special economic zone in the deep sea port of Gwadar, officials told AFP.

The 40-year lease will see the government of Baluchista­n hand over a 923-hectare (2,300-acre) swathe of tax-exempt land as part of the ChinaPakis­tan Economic Corridor, an ambitious $46 billion investment plan linking western China to the Arabian Sea.

The contract assigning the land to the China Overseas Port Holding Company is being signed on Wednesday in Gwadar, according to Dostain Khan Jamaldini, chief of the Gwadar Port Authority.

The contract will allow China to build an export zone and an internatio­nal airport, Baluchista­n’s top provincial official said Tuesday.

“China has asked us to provide land for building an export processing zone and a modern internatio­nal airport in Gwadar,” Baluchista­n Chief Minister Abdul Malik Baloch told AFP.

China is also building a road network to link the zone to the airport and a sea port, and the provincial government will provide the land according to their requiremen­ts, he said.

As part of the wider plans, work on the Gwadar Internatio­nal Airport would start in the next couple of months.

Pakistan is also raising a special security force of between 10,000 and 25,000 men to protect the port.

Desperatel­y poor Baluchista­n has been roiled since 2004 by a separatist insurgency aimed at seeking greater control over the province’s rich oil, gas and mineral resources.

Gwadar port, located 540 kilometres (335 miles) southwest of Karachi, was built in 2007 with technical help from Beijing as well as Chinese financial assistance of some $248 million.

But acquiring the land from private owners to build the economic zone took several years and cost the Baluch government around $62 million, officials have said.

Some Baluch nationalis­ts have accused the Chinese of conspiring with the Pakistani elite to plunder the province’s resources while doing little to share profits and create jobs for local people.

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