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Saudi Crown Prince to Announce $20B Investment Projects in Pakistan

beijingwalker

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Saudi Crown Prince to Announce $20B Investment Projects in Pakistan
Last Updated: February 13, 2019 9:55 AM
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FILE - Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman attends the second day of the Future Investment Initiative conference, in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.

ISLAMABAD —

Saudi Arabia’s crown prince, Mohammed bin Salman, is set to make his first state visit to Pakistan on Saturday, where he is expected to announce investment projects worth up to $20 billion, a senior official told VOA.

The unprecedented Saudi investment is being viewed by Prime Minister Imran Khan’s nascent government as a major boost for cash-strapped Pakistan, which is facing an economic crisis and balance of payments pressure.

It will also send a strong message to other international investors to come to Pakistan, said Haroon Sharif, who chairs Pakistan’s Board of Investment, (BoI) which promotes and facilitates investors.

“At this stage, we are expecting serious Memorandums of Understanding [for concrete projects] between $15 billion to $20 billion worth of investments from Saudi Arabia in the area of oil refining, petrochemicals, energy sector, alternate energy and the mineral sector,” Sharif told VOA. However, these number are subject to technical feasibilities, he emphasized.

The Saudi prince, often referred to as MBS, will be accompanied by a high-powered delegation, including members of the royal family, key ministers and leading businessmen. He will hold meetings with Prime Minister Khan and other top officials, as well as Pakistani military leaders.

Sharif said that the anticipated Saudi investment includes an oil refinery to be established in the southwestern coastal city of Gwadar, where China has built a seaport as part of its global Belt and Road Initiative. The proposed refinery is estimated to cost around $10 billion.

Officials say the refinery will be in place “in 3-5 years” and it will help meet Pakistan’s needs of refined oil products, which it currently imports. The surplus, they say, will be exported from Gwadar to other buyers.

Saudi investment also intends to target food and agriculture sectors in Pakistan.

Strong ties

Pakistan has traditionally maintained strong political, cultural, economic and defense ties with Saudi Arabia. The Saudi Kingdom hosts hundreds of thousands of Pakistani expatriates, and is a key source of oil supplies to Islamabad on deferred payments and cash grants to help Pakistan’s traditionally struggling economy.

Pakistani officials insist the Saudi intended investment has no strings attached to it such as asking Pakistan to send its troops to assist in Saudi war in Yemen.

In October, Riyadh said it would lend Pakistan $3 billion in cash and allow Islamabad to defer payments for oil imports worth $3 billion for a one-year period to support the country’s ailing economy. The money has already been deposited to the State Bank of Pakistan.

A Pakistani official said Prime Minister Khan has developed a “special relationship and friendship” with MBS and the two leaders have vowed to further deepen ties between the two countries.

Khan was among a few international leaders who participated in an investment conference Saudi Arabia hosted in October. The event was organized just days after the murder of Jamal Khashoggi, a Washington Post columnist, at the Saudi Consulate in Istanbul. Many foreign participants boycotted the conference to protest Khashoggi’s killing.

The United Arab Emirates, a staunch Saudi ally, has recently also offered a $6 billion package to Pakistan. Sharif noted that the UAE has also nearly finalized plans to establish an oil refinery in Pakistan with an anticipated production capacity of about 300,000 barrels. That project would require about $8 billion in investments, he added.

Chinese investment
International monitors don't consider security a major barrier in the way of investment in Pakistan, noted Sharif.

“People have removed the security lens and have begun to look at Pakistan from an economic diplomacy lens," he said. "This is a major shift because for the past five years only China was looking at Pakistan through the economic diplomacy lens."

Pakistan’s partnership in the U.S.-led “war on terror” after 9/11 attacks triggered a militant backlash in the South Asian nation, killing tens of thousands of people and causing losses to the tune of more than 100 billion dollars to national economy, according to official estimates.

Until now, neighboring China, a close ally of Islamabad, was the only country to invest in Pakistan, with around 20 billion dollars in energy as well as infrastructure projects over the past five years.

https://www.voanews.com/a/pakistan-...announce-20b-investment-projects/4784871.html
 
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The investment is great news, but people should not expect miracles. These industries might take a few years to actually start, it could be close to 10 years before the day to day maximum economic benefits are seen.
Feasibility on the refinery will take 15 months..construction another 3 years
 
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There is no free lunch

Remember we wont fight iran
I am probably one of the most pro Iran memebers here. On the other hand one of the most critical of KSA on PDF. However, Pakistan comes first. It's all about interest of te state. If KSA gave the right figure ~ saying anything above $50 billion I would support Pakistan Army being sent to fight in Yemen. Without any hesitation.

This is what richest countries do all the time. Chase dollars or their interests. Look at Afghanistan. It';s a American war. But look at the countries who have troops there. Turkey, even Singapore !


nato-flags.jpg
 
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Crazy rich country...... Pakistan is so lucky to have such a filthy rich buddy..

You'd be surprised how hygenic the saudi people are. And also at how generous and charitable they are. Ever wondered how everyone in that country prefers to dress in white?
 
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I am probably one of the most pro Iran memebers here. On the other hand one of the most critical of KSA on PDF. However, Pakistan comes first. It's all about interest of te state. If KSA gave the right figure ~ saying anything above $50 billion I would support Pakistan Army being sent to fight in Yemen. Without any hesitation.

This is what richest countries do all the time. Chase dollars or their interests. Look at Afghanistan. It';s a American war. But look at the countries who have troops there. Turkey, even Singapore !


nato-flags.jpg

Pakistan has always stood by Iran as a good neighbor and a brotherly nation. The Iranian regime, after 1979, however, had an extremely sectarian policy, which covertly did a lot of damage to Pakistan's core interests during the 90s, and since then has done a lot of covert as well as overt damage.
 
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Pakistan has always stood by Iran as a good neighbor and a brotherly nation. The Iranian regime, after 1979, however, had an extremely sectarian policy, which covertly did a lot of damage to Pakistan's core interests during the 90s, and since then has done a lot of covert as well as overt damage.

Pakistan is decidedly in the Saudi camp now. Firmly.
 
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They are oil rich and can employ a Indian cook, Bengali cleaner, Pakistani driver. And themselves slauncxh around or drive around in cool white cloths ...

People in many rich countries can afford a cook, a cleaner and a driver. Often they themselves do worse things than slouching around and wear worse things than cool white clothes.

Pakistan is decidedly in the Saudi camp now. Firmly.

Think of it as: What has Saudi Arabia done for Pakistan, and what has Iran done for Pakistan? Make a list. Here's a start:
Iran: Saudia:
Kulbushan $ 6b bailout
... ...
Now tell me, who should Pakistan be closer to?
 
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People in many rich countries can afford a cook, a cleaner and a driver. Often they themselves do worse things than slouching around and wear worse things than cool white clothes.



Think of it as: What has Saudi Arabia done for Pakistan, and what has Iran done for Pakistan? Make a list. Here's a start:
Iran: Saudia:
Kulbushan $ 6b bailout
... ...
Now tell me, who should Pakistan be closer to?

Pakistan should be true to its own national interests, now and always. Whatever it takes. That is all.
 
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