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  Opinion   Columnists  28 Aug 2018  Shift in Imran’s stand on China may ‘expose’ CPEC rhetoric

Shift in Imran’s stand on China may ‘expose’ CPEC rhetoric

Published : Aug 28, 2018, 12:36 am IST
Updated : Aug 28, 2018, 12:36 am IST

PM Khan’s populist politics will necessarily take him down a rocky path to Beijing’s doorstep.

Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan’s focus on widening the tax net will also bump against CPEC planning. (Photo: AP)
 Pakistan Prime Minister Imran Khan’s focus on widening the tax net will also bump against CPEC planning. (Photo: AP)

Since coming to power, Imran Khan and his team have repeatedly acknowledged Pakistan’s myriad foreign policy challenges. But while tweets and statements focus on reviving talks with India, the Pakistan Tehreek-e-Insaf-led government’s greatest challenge arguably comes across a different border — from friend, not a foe: China.

Do not be fooled by the $2 billion post-election bailout. If anything, this timely intervention betrays China’s recognition that Pakistan’s new Prime Minister will struggle to reconcile his populist politics and Islamabad’s current relationship with Beijing. Indeed, China’s anxiety about Sino-Pakistan ties in the Imran Khan era was betrayed the moment his victory was clear, and the Chinese media began to warn Mr Khan against paying heed to the Western media coverage of the bilateral relationship.

The issue is not whether CPEC will proceed in “Naya Pakistan”. That is a must. There is military and cross-party support for the investment corridor and, frankly, Pakistan has few other options. The issue is whether the CPEC’s progress will expose PM Khan’s populism as rhetoric.

PM Khan’s populist politics will necessarily take him down a rocky path to Beijing’s doorstep. How can he speak of transparency without being confronted with the opacity of CPEC’s financial arrangements? Finance minister Asad Umar has already promised to make public the terms of the CPEC deals. But will these be terms that the public can stomach?

Similarly, how can PM Khan continue to rail against the Sharifs’ and the PML(N)’s corruption and economic mismanagement without scrutinising the CPEC projects? Railway minister Sheikh Rashid had previously called for investigations into a CPEC power project in which he alleged corruption.

Then there’s the matter of job creation. PM Khan’s promise of creating 10 million jobs in his first 100 days has been among his most lauded. But his tenure will see an influx of Chinese workers to service CPEC projects, while unskilled Pakistani labourers are relegated to the sidelines. Cue to the Prime Minister’s impassioned speeches about the need to educate and upskill Pakistanis, which will be on point. But human capital development cannot take place overnight, and local labour use is not China’s operating style anyway. That leaves the PM with the disconnect between widespread unemployment even as the presence of Chinese workers grows.

Imran Khan’s focus on widening the tax net will also bump against CPEC planning. Take, for example, the decision last year by the power regulatory authority, Nepra, to pass one per cent of the costs of 19 CPEC power projects to consumers through an increased tariff, partly to cover the expenses on providing security. Or the fact that more transparency around CPEC will further clarify that Pakistan has received loans — not grants — that will have to be repaid with taxpayers’ money. Won’t Pakistanis question why their tariff payments and taxes are for China’s benefit?

A savvy Opposition could also attack the Prime Minister on the way his government balances ties with China and the US. If the PTI-led government opts for an IMF package, the bailout will coincide with the beginning of CPEC repayments, and related renegotiations. The Opposition could then argue that increased CPEC transparency or renegotiations with China have occurred at the behest of the IMF (and by extension, the United States), and thus undermine Mr Khan’s promise to equalise relations with Washington.

In recent years, the Prime Minister’s stance on CPEC has been strong and often principled. He was one of few political leaders willing to question and criticise projects, and push for a more equitable distribution of Chinese largesse. His party called for CPEC projects to be approved by Parliament. The Khyber Pakhtunkhwa government opted for ADB financing for a Peshawar bus project, rejecting Chinese offers to include it under the CPEC umbrella. And who can forget that it was Imran Khan’s 2014 dharna that led Chinese President Xi Jinping to postpone his Pakistan trip and the official CPEC launch by a year? This track record indicates that the new government could be the strong negotiator that Pakistan needs to transform the CPEC into a genuine investment in Pakistan, for the benefit of Pakistanis.

By arrangement with Dawn

Tags: imran khan, cpec