Omar1984
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Omar, we've had this discussion before the rail link to China from Pakistan is estimated to cost over 10 billion USD and take 15 years to build, a 2008 report on the PRC ECCO website deems this link to be commercially unviable but goes on to say that it can be built for strategic reasons. The decision to build the Pak-China rail link will remain with the Chinese since the cost of building and maintaining the link is higher on the Chinese side, it is still uncertain if China will invest in a Pak-China link when an alternative link via Central Asia is available to China. There is some speculation that the Chinese are slowly losing interest in Gwadar due to this and other considerations.
The good news is Pakistan can still access China via Afghanistan, I’m anxious for Pakistan and Afghanistan to get into a mutually beneficial commercial relationship - it is crucial for long term peace and stability.
Even through the worst of times for Pakistan, China has never left Pakistan:
Chinese dig in as foreigners leave Pakistan
QUETTA, Pakistan – China, rather than have its workers in Pakistan join the exodus of foreigners who are quitting the strife-torn country because of security concerns, the dismal state of the economy or both, is increasing its involvement there and planning further projects.
The number of Chinese engineers working in Pakistan has surged to 10,000 this year from 3,000 in 2008, working on 120 projects in different sectors of the economy. China is also involved in a 750-kilometer railway linking the two countries, from Havellian to the 4,730-meter-high Khunjerab Pass in Gilgit-Baltistan, the area until recently known as the Northern Areas. Havellian is linked with the rest of the rail network in Pakistan, and the Chinese will lay track within its territory up to Khunjerab.
Analysts say that China is increasingly interesting in investing in Gilgit-Baltistan, shifting its focus from insurgency-hit Balochistan in Pakistan’s southwest, where China is already involved in large development projects including Gwadar port. A proposed Pakistan-China energy and trade corridor, involving gas and oil pipelines and a rail link, would start in Gwadar and enter China’s Xinjiang region after running through the Gilgit-Baltistan region.
Some 767 development projects are to be carried out in Gilgit-Baltistan this year, with a particular focus and the help of China on the power sector to harness the huge hydro-power potential of the region.
China’s determination to maintain its interest in Pakistan was underlined recently by Chinese Ambassador to Pakistan, Lou Zhaohui, who told the media in Islamabad, “A number of foreigners [have] left Pakistan, but we are committed to complete all the projects on which Chinese are working.”
China has expressed satisfaction over the security being provided to its nationals in Pakistan, where the Chinese embassy has a joint task force with the interior ministry and has a 24-hour hotline.
Chinese dig in as foreigners leave Pakistan | PK on web
As for Afghanistan, China is helping Pakistan build a railway track to Afghanistan as well. Afghanistan is a member of the ECO states and the goal of this railway is to connect all the ECO member states through railway. Afghanistan is connected to China by the narrow Wakhan Corridor, the weather conditions might be a little better than the Karakoram Highway but China and Pakistan are working on a railway connecting Pakistan and China, you are right it may be costly but China is investing a lot. Pakistan maybe poor but we have a good friend.
Here's Pakistan's contribution the Pak-China railway:
http://www.defence.pk/forums/econom...arded-feasibility-pak-china-rail-service.html
P.S. China has not left Gwadar. Gwadar Port is HEAVILY invested by China, they will not forget about Gwadar, the entire city is still undergoing construction and the Chinese are helping Pakistanis build Gwadar.
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