As protests continue in Pakistan’s Gwadar, China pledges to deliver CPEC benefits to locals

A general view of the residential area in Pakistan's port city of Gwadar on February 12, 2013. (AFP/File)
Short Url
Updated 01 December 2021
Follow

As protests continue in Pakistan’s Gwadar, China pledges to deliver CPEC benefits to locals

  • China says CPEC had long focused on “people’s livelihood and well-being and benefiting the local people”
  • Says will work with Pakistan to “play a more positive part in improving people’s livelihood in both countries”

ISLAMABAD: As protests continued on Tuesday in the Pakistani port city of Gwadar over a lack of basic facilities for residents of the area, China, which has heavily invested in building the port and other development schemes, said it was willing to work with Pakistan to ensure its projects delivered benefits for locals. 

The aim for China and Pakistan has been for Gwadar – located on the Arabian Sea near Iran and the mouth of the Persian Gulf – to become a regional commercial, industrial and shipping hub, as part of the ambitious China Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) project.

The corridor is designed to give China a shorter, more secure trading route, via Pakistan, to the Middle East and beyond, while also boosting Pakistan’s economy.

But locals of the city have long complained that Chinese presence and investment in the area has done little to improve their lives, particularly with regards to water scarcity. 

Speaking at a weekly press briefing on Monday, Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Wang Wenbin said CPEC had long focused on “people’s livelihood and well-being and [on] benefiting the local people.”

“China is ready to work with Pakistan to advance the high-quality development of CPEC so as to deliver more benefits to the local people,” he said. “The Gwadar Port, a leading project of CPEC, focuses on development and people’s livelihood.”

Wang said the China-Pakistan Gwadar Faqeer Middle School, a vocational training institute in Gwadar and the China-Pakistan Fraternity Emergency Care Center in Gwadar, which had been completed, had “played important roles in and made China’s contributions to creating education opportunities, improving employment skills and responding to COVID-19 for the benefit of the local people.”

He reiterated that China was ready to work with Pakistan to “jointly advance high-quality development of CPEC, build and operate all CPEC projects including the Gwadar Port well, play a more positive part in improving people’s livelihood in both countries, and build an even closer China-Pakistan community with a shared future in the new era.”


Top Pakistani clerics warn government against sending troops to Gaza to disarm Hamas

Updated 23 December 2025
Follow

Top Pakistani clerics warn government against sending troops to Gaza to disarm Hamas

  • Pakistani clerics raise alarm over reports of pressure on Muslim nations to provide troops for Gaza stabilization force under Trump peace plan
  • Islamabad has previously said that it is willing to join the international stabilization force but ‘not ready’ to play any role in disarming Hamas

ISLAMABAD: A group of Pakistan’s top religious and political leaders on Monday warned the government against sending Pakistani troops to Gaza to disarm Palestinian group Hamas, amid discussions over a proposed International Stabilization Force (ISF) for the Palestinian territory.

The representative gathering, chaired by prominent scholar Mufti Taqi Usmani, brought together leaders from Deobandi, Barelvi, Ahl-e-Hadees and Shia schools of thought, alongside leaders of the country’s main religio-political parties, Jamiat Ulema-e-Islam-Fazl (JUI-F) and Jamaat-e-Islami (JI).

The international stabilization force, which is to be composed of troops from Muslim countries, is the cornerstone of President Donald Trump’s peace plan for Gaza announced in Sept. Islamabad has previously said it is willing to join the ISF but “not ready” to play any role in disarming Hamas. Hamas’s Gaza chief Khalil Al-Hayya said this month the group had a “legitimate right” to hold weapons, while Israel has repeatedly insisted that Hamas be disarmed.

In a joint statement issued after the meeting in the port city of Karachi on Monday, Pakistani clerics raised alarm over reports that international pressure is mounting on Muslim-majority nations to provide troops for the transitional security force in Gaza, following Israel-Hamas ceasefire.

“In such circumstances, demands are being made to Muslim countries that they send their forces there to disarm Hamas,” the statement said. “Several Muslim governments have already refused this, and pressure is being increased on Pakistan.”

Last month, the United Nations Security Council approved Washington’s plan, which called for a yet-to-be-established Board of Peace as a transitional authority that Trump would head, and the stabilization force, which would be empowered to oversee borders, provide security and demilitarize the territory.

The gathering of Pakistani clerics urged Islamabad to resist any diplomatic overtures from Washington regarding troop deployment.

“This gathering, with full emphasis, demands the Government of Pakistan refrain from sending its forces to disarm Hamas and that it should not yield to any pressure in this regard,” the statement said.

The assembly expressed complete support for the liberation of Palestine and described the effort as a “duty of every Muslim.”

It said that Pakistan’s armed forces are “imbued with the spirit of jihad” and that the “notion of placing them against any sacred struggle for the liberation of Baitul Muqaddas or Palestine is impossible for the nation to accept.”

The religious leaders characterized the proposal as a “conspiracy” from which the government must “protect the country.”

Pakistani foreign office spokesperson Tahir Andrabi and the prime minister’s spokesperson for foreign media, Mosharraf Zaidi, did not respond to Arab News requests for comment on the statement.

Washington reportedly views Pakistan as a prime candidate for the ISF, given its experience in high-intensity border conflicts and internal counter-insurgency operations.

Last week, Pakistan’s foreign office said that Islamabad had not taken any decision on joining the proposed stabilization force for Gaza and had received no formal request from the US or any other country in this regard.

“I am not aware of any specific request made to Pakistan. We will inform you about any development if it takes place,” Andrabi told reporters.

He also sought to distance the government from rumors of a pending visit by Pakistan’s defense forces chief, Field Marshal Asim Munir, to the US to meet President Trump.