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XINHUA-PAKISTAN SERVICE

Pakistan doesn’t believe in so-called “trap” of Chinese loansBreaking

April 09, 2019

BEIJING, April 09 (INP): Pakistan does not believe in the propaganda of so-called "trap" of Chinese loans in the implementation of Belt and Road Initiative (BRI),

"If you keep your interest first, you will not find China an unfair partner," said Shandana Gulzar Khan, Pakistan's parliamentary secretary for commerce. "But it depends on how well you do your homework," he added.

Khan was addressing a session on the second day of the World Economic Forum on the Middle East and North Africa 2019 held in the Dead Sea area of Jordan, reports Chinese State media here on Tuesday.

In Pakistan, he pointed out the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor has created tens of thousands of jobs and revived the economy of an entire region.

Meanwhile, senior Chinese diplomat Li Chengwen in his address on the occasion said that that no participating country of Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) has complained of falling into the so-called "trap" of Chinese loans.

"The Initiative aims to increase the economic prosperity of a country. It does not aim at expanding the political and geographical authority of China in the world," he said.

"China is trying to find mechanisms to avoid the 'debt trap,'" Li said many participants at the forum in Jordan agreed with Li's comments.

Speaking at the session, He Wenping, a research fellow of the Institute of West-Asian and African Studies, Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, echoed Li's remarks.

"The biggest worry on the 'debt-trap diplomacy' should come from China's side, not from outside. It is tax payers' money," the Chinese professor said. "China is not waving the 'China First' flag," she said.

The upcoming Belt and Road forum to be held in Beijing later this month could be an opportunity to kick start a "second phase" of the initiative, she added.

The Chinese envoy was responding to the criticism directed at the BRI by some people in the United States and Europe ahead of the second Belt and Road Forum for International Cooperation, due to be hosted by China later this month in Beijing.

The initiative, proposed by China in 2013, aims at building a trade and infrastructure network connecting Asia with Europe and Africa along the ancient trade routes of the Silk Road to seek common development and prosperity.

As of July 2018, more than 100 countries and international organizations had signed Belt and Road cooperation documents with China, extending the initiative's scope from the Eurasian continent to Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean, and the South Pacific region.