Google - AFP, Nasir Jaffry (AFP), 18 February 2013
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Boats
are moored at Gwadar port in the Arabian Sea on February 12, 2013
(AFP/File,
Behram Baloch)
|
ISLAMABAD
— China took control Monday of a strategic Pakistani port on the Arabian Sea,
as part of a drive to secure energy and maritime routes that also gives it a
potential naval base, sparking Indian concern.
The
Pakistani cabinet approved the transfer of Gwadar, currently a commercial
failure cut off from the national road network, from Singapore's PSA
International to the state-owned China company on January 30.
It had
not been clear when the actual handover would take place, but Pakistani
President Asif Ali Zardari presided over the signing of a memorandum of
understanding on Monday that was broadcast live by local television.
"The
contract of operation of Gwadar port is formally given to China. Today, the
agreement is transferred from the Port of Singapore Authority to China Overseas
Ports Holding Company Limited," Zardari announced.
"The
award of this contract opens new opportunities for our people... It gives new
impetus to Pakistan-China relations."
The
Pakistanis pitched the deal as offering an energy and trade corridor that would
connect China to the Arabian Sea and Strait of Hormuz, a gateway for a third of
the world's traded oil, overland through an expanded Karakoram Highway.
Experts
say it would cut thousands of kilometres off the distance which oil and gas
imports from Africa and the Middle East have to travel to reach China.
"Gwadar
port will enhance trade and commerce not only between Pakistan and China but
also in the region," said Zardari.
China
paid about 75 percent of the initial $250 million used to build the port but in
2007 PSA International won a 40-year operating lease.
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This
photograph taken on February 12, 2013 shows the construction site at
Gwadar
port in the Arabian Sea (AFP, Behram Baloch)
|
Then-ruler
Pervez Musharraf was reportedly unwilling to upset Washington by giving control
of the port to the Chinese.
On
February 6 Indian Defence Minister A.K. Antony said New Delhi was concerned by
Pakistan's decision to transfer management of the deep-sea port to China, which
has interests in a string of other ports encircling India.
Pakistan
foreign ministry spokesman Moazzam Ahmad Khan dismissed those concerns last
week, telling reporters: "This is not something that any other country
should have any reason to be concerned about."
Gwadar
is part of the southwestern province of Baluchistan, the most deprived part of
Pakistan despite being rich in oil and gas deposits. The province is gripped by
a separatist insurgency and record levels of sectarian violence.
On
Saturday, a bomb killed 89 people in a Hazara Shiite Muslim neighbourhood of
the provincial capital Quetta, barely a month after twin suicide bombers killed
92 people at a Hazara snooker hall elsewhere in the city.
Zardari
said the building of infrastructure around the port will also promote economic
activity in Gwadar and Baluchistan.
But some
analysts warn that it may be some time before Pakistan can benefit from China's
takeover of Gwadar, stressing that the connecting roads and an expanded
Karakoram Highway still need to be finished.
They also
suggest that security concerns have made China more cautious about big
investment projects in Pakistan.
In 2004,
three Chinese engineers helping to build Gwadar were killed in a car bombing.
The same year, two Chinese engineers working on a hydroelectric dam project in
South Waziristan were kidnapped and one of them died.
Gwadar
is the most westerly in a string of Chinese-funded ports in Nepal, Sri Lanka,
Myanmar and potentially Bangladesh that encircle its big rival, India.
The
ports were dubbed China's "string of pearls" -- or potential naval
bases similar to those of the United States -- but some analysts pour cold
water on suggestions that Beijing is scouting for naval bases in the Indian
Ocean.
Andrew
Small, an expert on China-Pakistan relations, believes that most of Beijing's
concerns can be resolved through cooperation, but that Gwadar is the most likely
port to be developed by China for naval use.
"Pakistan
is probably the only government where the level of trust between the two
militaries is high enough to make that a completely reliable prospect," he
told AFP recently.


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