Pakan PM Sharif to be first foreign leader to visit China after Xi Jinping’s re-election to president’s post for third time
Pakan Prime Miner Shehbaz Sharif will be the first head of government to visit Beijing next week to felicitate Chinese President Xi Jinping, who secured a record third five-year term at the recent Congress of the ruling Commun Party.
During the visit from November 1-2, the two sides will review the all-weather strategic cooperation partnership and exchange views on regional and global developments. The two countries will also sign new deals including firming up of the USD 60 billion China-Pakan Economic Corridor (CPEC) cooperation, according to Pakan officials.
Last Sunday, 69-year-old Xi was re-elected as the General Secretary of the Commun Party of China for an unprecedented third term at the party’s 20th Congress, becoming the first Chinese leader after the party founder Mao Zedong to rule beyond two five-year term.
Sharif will be the first head of the government to meet Xi though his visit follows Vietnam’s ruling Commun Party chief Nguyen Phu Trong who will arrive here on a four-day visit on October 30. German Chancellor Olaf Scholz too is expected to visit China shortly to hold talks with Xi.
This will be Sharif’s first visit to China after taking office and he will be among the first foreign leaders to visit after the 20th CPC National Congress, which speaks about the “special friendship and strategic mutual trust between our two countries”, Chinese Foreign Minry spokesman Wang Wenbin told a media briefing here on Wednesday.
Besides Xi, Sharif will meet Premier Li Keqiang and Li Zhanshu the Chairman of China’s Parliament, the National People’s Congress (NPC).
Both Li Keqiang and Li Zhanshu are set to retire after March next year as a new set of leaders and officials will take over the party and government headed Xi in his third five-year term.
“The leaders will have an in-depth exchange of views on bilateral relations and international and regional issues of common interest, and jointly charter the course for and steer the growth of China-Pakan relations,” Wang said, adding that the two countries are “all-weather strategic cooperative partners” and “iron-clad friends” for the past 70 plus years.
In Islamabad, Pakan’s Foreign Office said that the visit is also “expected to advance the wide-ranging bilateral cooperation agenda with the conclusion of a number of MoUs/Agreements in diverse areas, and consolidate the momentum of CPEC cooperation in the wake of the 11th meeting of the CPEC Joint Cooperation Committee (JCC) on October 27, 2022.” This will be Sharif’s second meeting with Xi after he assumed office in April 2022. He met Xi last month on the sidelines of Shanghai Cooperation Organisation (SCO) summit in Uzbekan.
Besides routine platitudes Chinese officials like “all-weather friends” and “iron brothers”, recent reports spoke of Beijing’s increasing dissatisfaction over Pakan’s failure to deliver on a number of fronts including its failure to stop the recurring attacks on Chinese personnel the militant groups.In his Samarkand meeting with Sharif, Xi had called for providing “solid protection” for hundreds of Chinese working on the CPEC projects.
With recurring attacks on its workers, China is reportedly pressing Pakan to permit the Chinese security agencies to provide security for their personnel which, according to press reports, Islamabad is resing as it meant boots on the ground for Chinese armed forces.
The issue is expected to figure in again during Sharif’s meeting here with Xi.
China is also unhappy over the delays in the projects of the CPEC, which is the flagship scheme of Xi’s multibillion-dollar pet project – the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI), resulting in cost overruns and discontentment among Chinese investors.
Last month, Pakan Army Chief Gen Qamar Javed Bajwa held talks with Chinese Defence Miner General Wei Fenghe in a surprise visit to China ahead of his retirement amid reports that China is also concerned over Pakan warming up to the US, the reported use of Pakan air bases American drones to conduct attack in Afghanan.
Chinese observers say that China is also increasingly worried about the continued political turmoil in Pakan resulting in the weakening of its public institutions especially the erosion of the influence of its military, over which Beijing banked on to sustain the close ties.
Sharif’s trip to China comes at a time when cash-strapped Pakan is making all efforts to arrange billions of dollars for payment of debts and bridge trade deficit. Pakan owes Paris Club countries a combined sum of around USD 10.7 billion.
The Paris Club is a group of officials from major creditor nations whose role is to find coordinated and sustainable solutions to the payment difficulties experienced debtor countries.
According to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Pakan’s total non-Paris Club bilateral debt currently stands at about USD 27 billion, of which Chinese debt is about USD 23 billion.
China has horically come to Pakan’s rescue with economic, political, and military assance and the leadership of the two countries has often described their ties as “all-weather”.