OBOR News & Developments

Hiranyaksha

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Yes i am, most of my encounters with muslim made me a person with inferiority complex.
Gaurav, never ever give up. Do not let anyone pull you down. Be the zen warrior. Have nerve of steels. Remember अहम् अस्मि . This is what our ancestors taught us. A very powerful words. which means मैं हूँ . Means you are not only acknowleding your existence but also declaring your accepting your existence along with declaring it to the world. and hence rightfully claiming what is yours.
 

mahesh

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China's white elephant: $1-bn Sri Lanka port shows what's wrong with BRI



Each year roughly 60,000 ships vital to the global economy sail through the Indian Ocean past a Chinese-operated port on the southern tip of Sri Lanka. Almost none of them stop to unload cargo.


The eight-year-old Hambantota port -- with almost no container traffic and trampled fences that elephants traverse with ease -- has become a prime example of what can go wrong for countries involved in President Xi Jinping’s “Belt and Road” trade and infrastructure initiative. Sri Lanka borrowed heavily to build the port, couldn’t repay the loans, and then gave China a 99-year lease for debt relief.



The experience has fueled fears that Xi’s plans to finance more than $500 billion in projects could see China take control of strategic infrastructure that also has military uses. But the massive state-owned Chinese conglomerate that took over the port in December wants to prove the sceptics wrong.

China Merchants Group -- whose 2017 revenues of $93 billion dwarf Sri Lanka’s gross domestic product -- is aiming to use its experience stretching from China to Europe to make the port profitable. During a rare look inside the grounds late last month, executive Tissa Wickramasinghe told Bloomberg News it had already nearly doubled the number of ships visiting the port.

"We are hell bent on making it work," said Wickramasinghe, the chief operating officer of Hambantota International Port Group, a joint venture led by China Merchants. "Whether the port should have been built, why it was built -- those are, to me, irrelevant now."

Still, the port has a long way to go before it worries competitors in Singapore, Malaysia and the Middle East. Even with more traffic, Hambantota is only handling about one ship a day -- not enough to even register on China Merchants’ own data showing cargo handling volumes for February. It didn’t make a United Nations’ list of the world’s top 40 container terminals.

Major shipping lines now route cargo through Colombo, Sri Lanka’s capital, and see little reason to divert operations south. Maersk Line, the world’s largest container carrier, is waiting for Hambantota’s operator to offer a “firm value proposition” for clients, according to Steve Felder, the company’s managing director in South Asia.

“It’s too early to tell whether Hambantota will be of interest to us,” Felder said. “Much will be dependent on connectivity within the mainline network, the extent of domestic cargo, cost and productivity.”


The port’s weak performance has fueled impressions that it simply serves China’s broader strategic interests to secure crucial trade routes and international supply chains. It would take billions of dollars of investment to generate meaningful traffic, according to Rahul Kapoor, a Singapore-based shipping analyst with Bloomberg Intelligence.


“Hambantota is a great example of the Chinese quest for global maritime dominance,” Kapoor said. “For the foreseeable future, it remains a strategic push over commercial viability.”


From its earliest days, the port has spurred debate. Former Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa spearheaded the project, taking Chinese loans to shower goodies on his home district of Hambantota -- including a new international airport that still has just one daily scheduled flight.

The current administration led by Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe told Bloomberg News the $1.1 billion debt-to-equity swap with China Merchants helped ease "the Chinese part of the debt burden." Still, the decision remains unpopular with many Sri Lankans. Ironically that’s boosted the political fortunes of Rajapaksa, who lost a 2015 election in part due to concerns he was too cosy with China.

On a recent afternoon at the port, vehicle traffic was nearly non-existent. A large monitor lizard meandered across the main road. A port executive shot a video with his iPhone of a Singaporean ship unloading cement into a smaller vessel, complaining that the process was taking too long.

Yet for Hambantota, it was busy: Two other ships were also docked -- a cruise ship whose passengers were on a jungle safari and a vessel full of vehicles.

"Today’s a good day," said Wickramasinghe, the COO.

To boost revenue, he plans to lure vehicle trans-shipments, refuelling and oil storage services away from Singapore, the U.A.E. Port of Fujairah and Malaysia’s Port Klang. The company could spend around $500 million on cranes to handle containers, and is speaking with "most of the oil majors" for oil bunkering and storage, he said.

Plans are also afoot to build a logistics and industrial zone next to the port. The 11.5 square-kilometre (4.4 square-mile) area -- more than three times the size of New York’s Central Park -- is now mostly jungle. Farmers nearby worry they could lose their ancestral land to proposed industrial zones.

"All the profits are going back to China," said Dharmasena Hettiarchchi, a 52-year-old farmer.

The abundance of space allows Japanese and Europeans automakers to store vehicles for trans-shipment to South Africa and the Middle East, Wickramasinghe said. China Merchants plans to more than double the number of vehicle trans-shipments to 250,000 this year, he said, with 10 percent annual growth expected the next few years. Singapore now handles 1 million vehicle trans-shipments annually.

China Merchants doesn’t go and dump money if it’s not commercially viable,” Wickramasinghe said. “It’s definitely not political or military.”

China this week dismissed speculation that the Belt and Road Initiative had a military dimension, with foreign ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying saying it was “open and transparent.” Hambantota was mutually beneficial and would aid Sri Lanka’s economy, she said.

“For others who speculate, I believe they have no reason to do so,” Hua said.

Still, Sri Lanka relocated its southern naval command to Hambantota in part to ease Indian and Japanese worries, state minister of defence Ruwan Wijewardene said in an interview.

“We’ve been speaking with them, and also with the Chinese,” he said. “We’ve made it very clear that it can’t be a military port.”

Wickramasinghe said it was normal for China Merchants to have a 99-year lease, citing a similar deal with the Port of Newcastle in Australia. Not everyone is convinced.

"The current Sri Lankan government has said that it will not permit the military use of the facility, but that could change," said Amit Bhandari, an analyst at Mumbai-based Gateway House. "Ninety-nine years is a long time after all."



http://www.business-standard.com/ar...ows-what-s-wrong-with-bri-118041800800_1.html
In the crucial times if China offer Srilanka to waiver off there unpaid debts for letting them Have Military presence at their port. Then Srilanka wont reject the offer

Sent from my X10 using Tapatalk
 

john70

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Why CPEC could be the end of China-Pakistan relationship
There appears to be a disconnect between what Beijing expects from it and what Islamabad makes of this grand scheme.


https://www.dailyo.in/politics/cpec-china-pakistan-diplomacy-balochistan-economy/story/1/23734.html


The China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) is best described by the Trumpian expression "covfefe": everyone has some idea of what it is, but no one is quite sure what it is. No surprise then that while some people in Pakistan are excited over what they think CPEC means, others are apprehensive.

In December 2015, the governor of State Bank of Pakistan admitted that he had no idea about how much of the money that the Chinese were committing on CPEC was debt, how much was equity and how much was in kind. More than two years later, it now transpires that even the government of Pakistan is not clear about the composition of funding for CPEC projects.

A couple of weeks ago, the federal cabinet was informed that “the amount of money, whether in the form of loan or grant, coming through CPEC is not known”. Clearly, if even the government of Pakistan is clueless about the structure and composition of CPEC funding, the sums they have worked out to sell CPEC as the greatest thing to happen to Pakistan are quite flaky.

In other words, while CPEC might actually be a game-changer for Pakistan, nobody seems quite sure what the game really is.

Growing disconnect

Increasingly, there appears to be a disconnect between what the Chinese expect from CPEC and what their "iron brother" Pakistan makes of this grand scheme. The Chinese insist that CPEC is an out-and-out economic project and not charity. If at all there is a strategic dimension to CPEC, then it is nothing more than stabilising a tottering Pakistan.

According to the Chinese, Pakistan’s economic collapse would destabilise the entire region and wouldn’t be good for any country, not even India. For their part, the Pakistanis claim that CPEC is emblematic of the partnership between the two countries. They scoff at suggestions of "debttrap diplomacy" of China and claim that what they are getting is investment, not debt.

Unlike the Chinese, the Pakistanis don’t deny the strategic import of CPEC, not just for China which gets access to the Indian Ocean and the oil-rich Middle East, but also for Pakistan which gets into an even closer embrace and mutual dependency with China, thus giving it a boost in its confrontation with India.

While for their own reasons, the Chinese would like to downplay the strategic aspect of CPEC, and Pakistan would like to overemphasise on it, the real disconnect is on the economics of the project. If CPEC is not charity, then it must yield the expected returns on investment in different projects.

The problem is that Pakistan is broke even before these projects have come on stream. That is to say, even before Pakistan starts paying for CPEC projects, it is finding itself going around with a begging bowl to friendly countries to meet its current external financial obligations. Once the CPEC payments start, the financing gap will only widen, making it impossible for Pakistan to repay the Chinese investors.

Of course, given that the Pakistanis have forever lived on other people’s money and treated debt as disposable income, they seem pretty blasé about paying back the Chinese. The Pakistanis are convinced that when payback time comes, the Chinese will be their sugar daddy and will find some way to write off or reschedule payments owed to them.

If reports in the Pakistani press are any indication, the Pakistanis think they have got the Chinese right where they want them. The ways the Pakistanis see it, if the Chinese don’t want to lose their money, then they will have to bail Pakistan out by throwing more good money after bad.

According to one report, Pakistan’s finance ministry has let it be known that “Islamabad considers that CPEC could only run in a smooth manner if Islamabad successfully avoids bailout package from the IMF so China will have to come forward to allocate special provisions for keeping Pakistan’s economy afloat…”



Critical projects

Another report quotes a Pakistani economist as saying that “Beijing cannot afford to bankrupt Pakistan, in part because of the country’s importance as a counterweight to India… for China repayment of the debt burden will be secondary to maintaining a good political and economic relationship with Pakistan”.

It isn’t quite clear if the Chinese see things the same way. While they certainly value their relationship with Pakistan, they haven’t as yet given any indication that they are willing to foot the entire bill and give the Pakistanis the sort of free lunches they got from the Americans.

Already there are signs of the Chinese rethinking some of their investment plans in Pakistan. Some very critical projects, including a $9 billion (Rs 60 crore) railway project which was to be one of the flagship projects of CPEC, has been put on hold because of financial reasons.

Circular debt

Other smaller projects have also been refused funding by the Chinese. Even on the power projects, there are concerns on payment of tariffs. The Chinese are already breathing down Pakistan’s neck to set up a revolving fund so that their projects don’t become victims of the crippling "circular debt" that has wreaked havoc in the energy sector.

There are also reports that the Chinese private companies and even bankers are asking serious questions about the viability of their investments in Pakistan. Even at the official level, while the magniloquence around CPEC remains unabated, a reality check was clearly visible during the 7th Joint Cooperation Committee meeting in November last.

From the very beginning, the economics of CPEC didn’t make much sense. Three years later, its math makes even less sense, more so because the sums and even the numbers of the Chinese and the Pakistanis don’t match. Increasingly, CPEC is looking like a pyramid scheme in which everyone parties as long as the money keeps flowing in; it is when the payback time comes, that reality starts biting.

For Pakistan, and for China, the payback time is coming. What remains to be seen is who picks the tab, China or Pakistan?
 

sorcerer

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Is Pakistan sitting on China’s BRI debt bomb? This report says it could derail economic growth in 8 countries

Pakistan, which is the centrepiece of China's ambitious multi-nation BRI project, is among eight countries that will suffer from Chinese debt "overhangs", leading to the impediment of sound public investment and economic growth.


Pakistan, which is the centrepiece of China’s ambitious multi-nation BRI project, is among eight countries that will suffer from Chinese debt “overhangs”, leading to the impediment of sound public investment and economic growth, a report has said. The One Belt One Road Initiative is adding more to Pakistan’s debt distress, as China is charging relatively higher interest rates, Center for Global Development said in a report.

It noted that Pakistan has interest-free loans from China’s banks in some cases and fully commercial rate in the case of the Ethiopia-Djibouti railway, putting Pakistan in high-risk debt-to-GDP threshold. “Unlike the 2-2.5% ‘concessional rate’ given to some China Exim Bank customers, reports indicate that some of Pakistan’s loans reflect rates as high as 5%,” the report said.

Besides Pakistan, the report said, Djibouti, The Maldives, Laos, Montenegro, Mongolia, Tajikistan, and Kyrgyzstan are the countries the most vulnerable countries. Countries such as Sri Lanka, Afghanistan, and Bhutan also have significant debt risks, but not as bad as the other eight.

(Image: Center for Global Development)
Adopted in 2017, China-led BRI spans in at least 68 countries with an announced investment as high as $8 trillion for a vast network of transportation, energy, and telecommunications infrastructure linking Europe, Africa, and Asia. The report has said that the primary concern with the BRI project is that the $8 trillion initiative will leave countries with debt overhangs that will impede sound public investment and economic growth more generally.

The report said that understanding debt sustainability of the project is important as there is also “considerable evidence” indicating significant negative impacts on countries and their people when governments incur too much debt. There are some signs that Chinese officials are moving toward greater policy coherence and discipline when it
comes to avoiding unsustainable debt, it added.


https://www.financialexpress.com/ec...erail-economic-growth-in-8-countries/1153243/
 

sorcerer

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Gwadar’s Water Crisis


Gwadar, the regional hub of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor struggles with continuous water crisis after years of chronic water shortages.

Water management in Gwadar, a port city on the southwestern coast of Balochistan, Pakistan has turned into a severe challenge for local and national authorities. Citizens have taken to the streets to protest both against the water crisis and the authorities that have failed to pay the tanker companies which have been providing water to the city for the past months. Indeed, the city has struggled with a seemingly unending water crisis since May 2017.

This crisis is bound to get worse as Gwadar’s annual population growth rate of nearly 3 percent is expected to balloon once port companies start hiring. Meanwhile, the government has not yet not found a sustainable solution to the water issue, rather it has been paying tanker companies to truck in water from Meerani Dam in the neighboring district of Kech around 150 kilometers away from Gwadar city, at the cost of Rs. 17,000 (about $254.74) for each tanker.

Although there is enough water in Meerani Dam to supply Gwadar for a few more months, the current profit-driven model is not only draining the provincial budget on a daily basis but it is also inefficient compared to other systems such as government-run aqueducts and pipes. But the government appears unready to offer a better solution and the city has to continue to rely on trucking in water by private contractors.


This tanker-mafia — as most citizens call it — has benefited enormously from the water shortage. The contractors have repeatedly stopped stopped supplying water over payment disputes holding the citizens of Gwadar de-facto hostage. This time, it has been more than a week since they stopped trucking water into the city forcing the citizens to take to the streets.

Struggles and protests over water are not new in Balochistan, but the repeated standoffs in Gwadar have become a major flashpoint amid rising tensions accentuated by ineffective governance, as well as growing poverty and inequality. Last November, protesters from Gwadar traveled all the way to Karachi, Pakistan’s largest city, where they protested in front of the Karachi Press Club. When this proved insufficient, the protesters also blocked a main traffic artery, the Syed Hashmi Avenue, and forced a city-wide strike to protest the water crisis during Prime Minister Shahid Khan Abbasi’s visit to Gwadar to inaugurate the newly constructed Marine Drive road.

Once the tanker companies were paid, they started to truck in water again. But this has now become an almost everyday story where the government stops payments for a time and in response the tanker-mafia announces a strike, which in turn triggers a citizens protest. Part of the problem is that the government has so far not come up with an effective solution to the ongoing water crisis. With the construction of the port since 2002, the population of the city has doubled and with other construction and industrial projects set to continue, water has been consumed at an alarming rate. During the last 20 years, Ankara Kaur Dam was the main source of water for the city but recently it dried up completely because of low rainfall and a massive build-up of silt.


With federal and Chinese funding, three new dams were completed in the last two years: Sawad, Shadi Kaur and Belar. But none have been connected to the city through pipeline systems so far. Many believe that due to climate change and droughts, even these additional dams will not be able to meet the water demands of the city.
Desalination plants could be a more long-term solution. Up until now, three desalination plants have been built with millions of rupees investment, but they have proven insufficient either due to design flaws or other technical issues.

Water-tankers remain the only solution for now and while there is no shortage of funding, there is clear lack of interest in permanently solving this ongoing issue. In other words, if the scarcity of water is driven by lack of water, it is equally driven by lack of effective governance.

Mariyam Suleman is a freelance writer from Gwadar and the assistant Editor of The Balochistan Point. She is a U.S. State Department Exchange program alumna and graduated with a Masters in Sociology from the University of Karachi. She tweets at @mariyamsuleman



https://thediplomat.com/2018/05/gwadars-water-crisis/
 

Chinmoy

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Although its all about load shedding and all, but just listen towards the end. Listen to what Baluchistan said......

 

sorcerer

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Costly lessons for leaders eyeing China's Belt and Road billions

By Iain Marlow

In the middle of a brand-new four-lane highway cutting through southern Sri Lanka’s jungle, Vijitha Gamage and his family left large piles of freshly harvested rice paddy to dry on the baking asphalt.

They didn’t need to dodge traffic. On a recent afternoon, the :rofl:barely used highway built with Chinese money through a rural stretch of the island nation carried more 50-kilogram (110-pound) rice sacks than vehicles. "The road gets really hot, so the rice dries faster," Gamage said. :rofl:


The project is one of several in Sri Lanka that offer lessons for countries looking to snag some of the more than $500 billion projected to underpin Chinese President Xi Jinping’s Belt and Road infrastructure initiative. Interviews with the nation’s politicians, government officials and financial experts show that mitigating the risks is key to maximizing opportunities.

When a 25-year civil war ended in 2009, Sri Lanka had little choice but to turn to China. Beijing stepped up aid and arms shipments as the U.S. and Europe withdrew funding, leaving China in position to quickly offer loans and financing.

Many countries in South Asia are in a similar position. Myanmar and Iran were under western sanctions, while extremist violence has kept investors away from Afghanistan, Pakistan and Bangladesh.


“No one was interested in investing in Sri Lanka,” said Luxman Siriwardena, a former finance ministry official who is now executive director of Colombo’s Pathfinder Foundation, a research group. “Anything is great when there is no alternative.”

Even so, Sri Lanka’s experience came with some costly lessons.

Lesson 1: Too Much Debt Can Backfire

The lure of easy money can tempt politicians to approve expensive projects that generate little economic activity. The sleepy southern district of Hambantota -- home to former President Mahinda Rajapaksa -- is a case in point.

Aside from the empty four-lane highway, Hambantota boasts an :rofl:international airport that services one scheduled flight a day:rofl:, a conference center that is hardly used and a :rofl:port that handles one ship a day. :rofl:All were goodies approved by Rajapaksa to benefit his electoral constituency in one of the country’s least developed regions.

The country now spends 80 percent of government revenues paying down what Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe has called "unprecedented" debts. Last year, Wickremesinghe -- who took office after Rajapaksa lost the presidency -- sold the port to a Chinese firm for $1.1 billion to ease the debt burden.

"If other countries are getting investments, they should not do it the way that we are doing it in Sri Lanka," said Beragama Wimala Buddhi Thero, the head monk at a local Buddhist temple who worries the new projects will displace villagers. "They should do it in a controlled way. And it should be transparent to the common people."

Lesson 2: Politicians Will Exploit Anti-China Sentiments

In the 2015 election, Rajapaksa suffered a surprise defeat after challenger Maithripala Sirisena attacked his tight relations with China, warning that Sri Lankans “would become slaves” if the trend continued. Three years later, Rajapaksa’s political group is attacking Sirisena for close ties with China.

"The Chinese are like an octopus -- once they get a hold of something, they take everything," said Ruwan Kumara, a local politician aligned with Rajapaksa who runs a store in Hambantota. "They want to get a hold of all the smaller Asian countries and become the most powerful country in Asia."


While discontent brews in the countryside, many in the capital benefit from the Chinese cash. Cranes loomed over the skyline in Sri Lanka’s capital, where a $1.4 billion land reclamation project led by state-owned China Communications Construction’s China Harbor Engineering aims to transform Colombo into a "world class" South Asian hub.

"Sri Lanka is smack in the middle" of China’s global infrastructure plans, said Thulci Aluwihare, who left Pricewaterhousecoopers LLP to join the Chinese firm’s local subsidiary. "As a nation, we should take advantage of this capital being exported out of China for infrastructure development. And make use of it."

Lesson 3: China’s Cash Has a Geopolitical Price

China has said its Belt-and-Road Initiative is a win-win solution that allows it to develop trade routes and export excess capital while building much-needed infrastructure in emerging economies. Yet that hasn’t stopped countries like India -- Sri Lanka’s second-largest trading partner -- from fearing a potential military component, particularly in Hambantota port.

"Clearly, those of us in the region need to be sensitive to India’s geopolitical interests," Sri Lankan central bank governor Indrajit Coomaraswamy said in late March at a forum in Colombo. "We in Sri Lanka have learnt the hard way that there are some red lines."

The prime minister said in a March 26 interview that he’s seeking more foreign inflows from India and Japan amid criticisms of Chinese investment. But in Colombo, others welcome the geopolitical political shift.

With the Asian Development Bank estimating the region needs $1.7 trillion in infrastructure spending annually, Beijing’s spending spree looks like a version of the Marshall Plan, according to Siriwardena, the former Sri Lanka finance ministry official.

“The Marshall Plan was brought in when the Americans wanted to resurrect or reconstruct Europe, but they didn’t do it for nothing -- they created a market for themselves, they developed allies,” he said. “We have something like that now.”
Read more at:
//economictimes.indiatimes.com/articleshow/64013679.cms?utm_source=contentofinterest&utm_medium=text&utm_campaign=cppst
 

sorcerer

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Sovereignty Compromised - SC moved to stop Chinese from buying land in Pak

A senior lawyer on Monday approached the country’s top court seeking directives for the government to :rofl:stop sale of land on proprietary rights to the Chinese citizens in connection with China-Pakistan Economic Corridor.:rofl:

Watan Party’s head Barrister Zafarullah Khan filed the petition before the Supreme Court, saying that Chinese citizens had been given certain relaxations in the name of CPEC and they were acquiring land on lease which was against the sovereignty of the state.

China-Pakistan Economic Corridor is a collection of infrastructure projects which started in 2013 and still is under construction throughout the country.

:rofl:Barrister Khan said that Chinese people had no problem in getting visas and visiting Pakistan but the Pakistani businessmen:laugh: had been facing huge problems in getting Chinese visas and going there for business. They had objected to the strict visa policy for them as compared to the Chinese.

He said the Chinese had been enjoying many other privileges as recreational parks and residential colonies were being established for them in Pakistan. The lawyer said that people of the country had related the CPEC project to the East India Company that led to British occupation in the sub-continent.

He questioned the agreement between both Pakistan and China about the project, stating that it had many flaws. Khan said it was one-sided contract. He said provision of such relaxation to the Chinese under the CPEC had compromised the country’s sovereignty.

He prayed to the court to issue directives for the government to review the terms and conditions of the CPEC accord and stop the Chinese from doing direct investment in the country.


https://nation.com.pk/08-May-2018/sc-moved-against-chinese-people-buying-land-in-pakistan\\\


Pakistan but the Pakistani businessmen:laugh: had been facing huge problems in getting Chinese visas and going there for business.

what will pakistani "BUSINESS MEN" do in china!! all the while when china is dumping their goods in pakistan through chinese outlets run by chinese :D
 

Anikastha

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Sovereignty Compromised - SC moved to stop Chinese from buying land in Pak

A senior lawyer on Monday approached the country’s top court seeking directives for the government to :rofl:stop sale of land on proprietary rights to the Chinese citizens in connection with China-Pakistan Economic Corridor.:rofl:

Watan Party’s head Barrister Zafarullah Khan filed the petition before the Supreme Court, saying that Chinese citizens had been given certain relaxations in the name of CPEC and they were acquiring land on lease which was against the sovereignty of the state.

China-Pakistan Economic Corridor is a collection of infrastructure projects which started in 2013 and still is under construction throughout the country.

:rofl:Barrister Khan said that Chinese people had no problem in getting visas and visiting Pakistan but the Pakistani businessmen:laugh: had been facing huge problems in getting Chinese visas and going there for business. They had objected to the strict visa policy for them as compared to the Chinese.

He said the Chinese had been enjoying many other privileges as recreational parks and residential colonies were being established for them in Pakistan. The lawyer said that people of the country had related the CPEC project to the East India Company that led to British occupation in the sub-continent.

He questioned the agreement between both Pakistan and China about the project, stating that it had many flaws. Khan said it was one-sided contract. He said provision of such relaxation to the Chinese under the CPEC had compromised the country’s sovereignty.

He prayed to the court to issue directives for the government to review the terms and conditions of the CPEC accord and stop the Chinese from doing direct investment in the country.


https://nation.com.pk/08-May-2018/sc-moved-against-chinese-people-buying-land-in-pakistan\\\





what will pakistani "BUSINESS MEN" do in china!! all the while when china is dumping their goods in pakistan through chinese outlets run by chinese :D
Arey bhai par har gali ke naali mein dollars se bare pade hai...
 

nimo_cn

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my indian fellows, hold your horses before jumping into any conclusion about OBOR.

infrastructure needs to be built slightly ahead of economic development, that is a lesson china has learned for the last decades.

not so long ago, indian members here taunted Chinese for its empty high speed trains. if you wish, you can review all the related threads that are buried deep in this subforum. it's the exactly the same argument, just like the one you are making over sri lankan highway and sea port. but now Chinese high speed railway has been proved to be a huge success, and it's transforming China in the way people have never imagined. And india decides to build its own HSR.

these infrastructures will support the development of Sri Lankan economy in the decades to come, as long as it stays a stable country and india keeps its dirty hands off the internal affairs of the country.
 

jadoogar

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my indian fellows, hold your horses before jumping into any conclusion about OBOR.

infrastructure needs to be built slightly ahead of economic development, that is a lesson china has learned for the last decades.

not so long ago, indian members here taunted Chinese for its empty high speed trains. if you wish, you can review all the related threads that are buried deep in this subforum. it's the exactly the same argument, just like the one you are making over sri lankan highway and sea port. but now Chinese high speed railway has been proved to be a huge success, and it's transforming China in the way people have never imagined. And india decides to build its own HSR.

these infrastructures will support the development of Sri Lankan economy in the decades to come, as long as it stays a stable country and india keeps its dirty hands off the internal affairs of the country.
The PRC HSR is a financial disaster as are many other PRC projects. The PRC debt, both internal and external are not payable. The only thing keeping the PRC alive is support/control of the US deep state. How many indices does Morgan Stanley add various flavors of PRC shares to?

HSR will not pay when your primary exports are low value added as are your primary internal products and services. And this HSR conclusion is not mine but that of Professor Pettis in a blog post a couple of years ago.
 

Flame Thrower

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my indian fellows, hold your horses before jumping into any conclusion about OBOR.

infrastructure needs to be built slightly ahead of economic development, that is a lesson china has learned for the last decades.

not so long ago, indian members here taunted Chinese for its empty high speed trains. if you wish, you can review all the related threads that are buried deep in this subforum. it's the exactly the same argument, just like the one you are making over sri lankan highway and sea port. but now Chinese high speed railway has been proved to be a huge success, and it's transforming China in the way people have never imagined. And india decides to build its own HSR.

these infrastructures will support the development of Sri Lankan economy in the decades to come, as long as it stays a stable country and india keeps its dirty hands off the internal affairs of the country.
Could you name one successful project in OBOR.

Sri Lanka went bankrupt because of your policy i.e infrastructure before development. By the way how long does it take for lanka to recover the debt....!!!

What works in China might not work everywhere for many reasons we could possibly fathom.
 

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