BCN-26 With eye on aid, Pakistan PM meets Chinese counterpart

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BCN-26

CHINA-PAKISTAN-TRADE-INVESTMENT

With eye on aid, Pakistan PM meets Chinese counterpart

BEIJING, Nov 3, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Pakistani Prime Minister Imran Khan met
with his Chinese counterpart Li Keqiang in Beijing Saturday, as he seeks aid
and investment from the world’s second largest economy in hopes of staving
off a financial crisis.

Before travelling to China — one of Pakistan’s firmest allies — Khan
said he was striving to obtain financial aid from two unnamed countries after
Pakistan secured $6 billion in funding from Saudi Arabia.

His government has also entered talks with the International Monetary Fund
over a potential bailout as it grapples with a balance of payment crisis and
current account deficit.

China is already a major investor in Pakistan, where the two countries are
building the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), a multi-billion-dollar
project at the heart of Chinese president Xi Jinping’s Belt and Road
Initiative, an ambitious, globe-spanning trade infrastructure programme.

The corridor aims to increase energy and transport links between the
western Chinese region of Xinjiang and the Arabian Sea via Pakistan.

However, given Pakistan’s deteriorating finances, there have been concerns
in recent months that portions of the agreement may have to be scaled down.

In his meeting with Li, Khan invited the Chinese premier to visit Pakistan
and see for himself the difference the mega-project has made in the country.

“CPEC in 2013 was just an idea. Now it is on the ground. And it has caught
the imagination of the people of Pakistan,” he said.

“We feel that this a great opportunity for our country to progress, to
attract investment. It gives us an opportunity to raise our standard of
living, growth rate.”

Li praised the relationship, saying “China and Pakistan are all-weather
partners.”

“Pakistan has always been regarded as a foreign policy priority by China.”

The meeting follows talks with President Xi Jinping on Friday, where the
former cricket star bemoaned his country’s financial woes, saying the economy
was at a “low point”.

Since taking power in August, Khan has sought loans from “friendly”
countries like Saudi Arabia, vowed to recover funds stolen by corrupt
officials, and embarked on a series of populist austerity drives to raise
cash.

Pakistan has gone to the IMF repeatedly since the late 1980s.

The last time was in 2013, when Islamabad got a $6.6 billion loan to
tackle a similar crisis.

BSS/AFP/HR/1200