Chinese NDRC chairman arrives for CPEC JCC meeting
Chairman, National Development and Reform Commission China, He Lifeng, Monday arrived in Pakistan to participate in the 9th China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) Joint Cooperation Committee (JCC) meeting, scheduled on Wednesday, November 6.
Besides participating in the JCC meeting, He Lifeng is schedule to participate in the inaugural ceremony for building 300 megawatt electricity plant in Gwadar, besides finalizing the master plan for the port city, official sources said.
The financing of $9 billion ML-I project, financing of western corridor, revival plan of Pakistan Steel Mills, agriculture cooperation and provincial development including Karachi Circular Railway would also come up for discussing in the meeting.
The Chashma Right-Bank, Tonsa Hydro Power and several other projects in Balochistan, Azad Jammu and Kashmir, Gilgit Baltistan would also be discussed. A significant progress is expected on private sector cooperation in industrial development as the business forums of both the countries were formed in this regard.
Four more joint working groups have been established under CEC that would focus on building cooperation in industry, agriculture, social and economic sectors of the country.
On the other side, French President Emmanuel Macron arrives in China on Monday to drum up new business deals, but under warning from his hosts to keep off thorny issues such as the pro-democracy protests in Hong Kong.
Landing in the afternoon, Macron will begin his second official trip to China in the financial hub of Shanghai where he will attend an international import fair against the backdrop of the US-China trade war.
He will have dinner with President Xi Jinping before heading to Beijing, where the two will hold more talks, with French officials saying Macron will not shy away from "taboo" topics including Hong Kong and the mass detention of Muslims in China's northwest Xinjiang region.
Human Rights Watch called on Macron to publicly press Xi to close "political education" camps in Xinjiang and respect Hong Kongers' rights to participate in politics.
Zhu Jing, a European affairs official at the foreign ministry, said China has prepared the "friendliest and warmest welcome" for the French leader.
But Zhu also warned that on human rights, the two countries should have "constructive" dialogue and avoid "mutually criticising each other or politicising the issue".
"Hong Kong and Xinjiang are matters of China's internal affairs. It is not relevant to put them on the diplomatic agenda," Zhu told reporters last week. Hong Kong has been rocked by months of political unrest, with a new night of violence on Sunday in which a knife-wielding man wounded five people, including a local pro-democracy politician who had his ear bitten off.
Zhu also warned France against playing a "disruptive" role in the Indo-Pacific region or sending warships into Beijing-claimed territorial waters.
France angered China in April when a French frigate sailed through the Taiwan Strait.