This isn't the updated map. There is nothing in Pakistan
and they are spending over $ 75 billion inside Pakistan to build roads and highways connecting the globe. Did some Indian friend of mine post this map due to built-in hatred against the Pakistanis?
But that is the original OBOR. CPEC is a part of OBOR only due to politics. As an economic belt, it is not.
As far as the Chinese are concerned, they will have an oil pipeline from the Middle East to China. Everything else in OBOR is merely dependent on Pakistani economy itself, and nothing else.
Apparently, who doesn't want to join the project (India) has a huge chunk going from Calcutta outwards. Go figure
There's nothing happening on that front. In fact it is China which is putting pressure on India to join OBOR.
http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/...to-join-obor-meeting/articleshow/57923925.cms
Anyway, BCIM is significantly better in terms of connectivity compared to CPEC. It connects India and China through the entirety of ASEAN. That's over 3 billion people. And BCIM goes through important nodal points for both India and China. Even then India is not concerned as much because India has better connectivity to ASEAN by sea.
In CPEC, it's just Pakistan, really, and no one else. Xinjiang's population is too insignificant, so the entirety of CPEC is dependent on Pakistan and Pakistan only. Afghanistan has a bigger population than Xinjiang. It is your neighbour Iran which has all the advantages.
Anyway, this is from CCTV.
BCIM, CPEC etc are just branches of OBOR, not the main project itself.
As it stands today, only rich countries or very small countries should tie up with OBOR. Any medium sized country like Pakistan or even a large country like India that connects to China will get swallowed by imports from China.
India doesn't need OBOR. As far as we are concerned, we are the Middle Kingdom, not China. India doesn't have China's connectivity problem. India has direct access to 4 oceans, China has access to only one.