Hong Kong: Almost seven years ago, Chinese President Xi Jinping had shared the planning of a massive China Pakistan Economic Corridor Projects (CPEC) linking its landlocked western region of Xinjiang to the Arabian Sea in a bid to venture into the West. But, even today, the vision seems far from reality.
Plans originally called for a seaport, roads, railways, pipelines, dozens of factories and the largest airport in Pakistan. In Gwadar, a remote scratch of land on Pakistan's southwest coast a new airport was supposed to have been completed with Beijing's funding more than three years ago. But the area remains fenced-off with scrubs and dun-coloured sand. Specks of mica in the dirt are the only things that glitter, South China Morning Post reported after citing the Chinese government's data.
The factories have yet to materialise on a stretch of beach along the bay south of the airport. A Pakistan Navy frigate is the only ship docked there and there's no sign of the sole scheduled weekly cargo run from Karachi.
Less than one-third of announced CPEC projects have been completed, totaling about USD19 billion, according to government statements. Pakistan bears much of the blame.
It has repeatedly missed construction targets as it ran out of money; it got a USD 6 billion bailout from the International Monetary Fund last year, the country's 13th since the late 1980s.
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Besides, two successive prime ministers also have been jailed on corruption charges. And the Baloch Liberation Army's desire for a separate homeland in Balochistan province where Gwadar is located has made life there uneasy. In May, militants stormed the city's only five-star Pearl Continental hotel and killed five people.