ThaniOruvan
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When India takes Pakistan Occupied Kashmir it will surely integrate with CPEC.
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Perfect - let's talk the business now...Again, we are not afraid of holding a plebiscite. We're ready when you are.
Indeed. Check out Modi-Obama image I posted on last page. It'll surely tell you what kinda state India is in. LMAO!We are not a vassal state of US, unlike
Sanghi version of indians is way more venomous than an ordinary mullah just saying, and why would Indians be showing any interest in CPEC
Which is why India needs to grow up and get out of this "Short-term thinking" mindset. National policies should be decided upon based on what's in the best interest of the nation rather than winning elections. Unfortunately, it's pretty much the same here.
Perfect - let's talk the business now...
Step no. 1 - read through the UN resolution - understand difference between the binding and non-binding
Step no. 2 - Take back the land gifted to China
Step no. 3 - Bring the demography back to pre 1947
Step no. 4 - Move all state and non state actors back from P0K and GB
Step no. 5 - Vacate and handover the land to India.
Let us know when you are finished -------
Indeed. Check out Modi-Obama image I posted on last page. It'll surely tell you what kinda state India is in. LMAO!
Unlimited access to warm waters of Persian gulf for making a great cup of teaCan any member tell me what is the use of CPEC to India ?
Unless and until you can connect to CPEC to central Asia, i don't see how it is useful to India.
Well, You are not discussing anything, just giving an opinion which was answered in post #79I don't think you get it. This discussion is clearly going over your head.
If there is a plebiscite, GB will not join India. If there is no plebiscite, GB will remain a part of Pakistan. So it really doesn't matter. Either way, GB is not a part of India, nor will it ever be.
When India takes Pakistan Occupied Kashmir it will surely integrate with CPEC.
Well, You are not discussing anything, just giving an opinion which was answered in post #79
Is there a problem with Reading comprehension with you?
Then let the tussle continue, enjoy what happens with CPEC with a pinch of salt...Clearly, it is you that has a "reading comprehension" problem. Plebiscite or no plebiscite, there is no scenario in which Gilgit-Baltistan becomes a part of India.
Beta, last time I checked, that day dream you're talking about, is already a reality with several parts / tracks of CPEC corridor already ready and operational as of now. Google a bit and you'll learn ..... beta.
It is time for you and your fellow indians to wake up from your wet dream and read the F*** Off sign facing you on both Chinese and Pakistani borders.
not before bharat mata get ready to take 150 nukes up its arse in direct war..
Azad Kashmir and GB are loyal Pakistanis, so u have no proxy there, only way is war...
i dont think writer did consider the time frame and tactically and strategically type of concepts here. because this CPEC may be very useful for indian economy but it is much much crucial or do or die matter for its enemy i-e pakistan. so if pakistan start reaping the benefits of CPEC and this start oililng the wheel of our economy which in turn put our feet on the growth and development accelrator then we would becom to be hypend with india and we would start getting leverage in international mainstream and specifically on dialogue table with india. so which indian fool can allow this to happen. i dont think so that indian strategist are so much fools are trading off between its short term benefit with its long term.‘It is in India’s interest to integrate into CPEC’
By IKRAM HOTI
Published: September 5, 2016
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PHOTO: ONLINE
ISLAMABAD: Although the environment around the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) has remained somewhat uncertain for over a couple of years, the situation appears now to have taken a turn for the better.
An Indian lobby might persist with opposition to this regional plan eulogised as the ‘game-changer’ slogan, but within Pakistan, a consensus can be seen evolving over the direction it takes in the near future.
Modi spoke India’s mind over CPEC
Is the political impediment in Pakistan out of its way? This question seems to be less relevant now than it was only about six months ago.
The questions most relevant now would be about the scheduled enforcement of the CPEC plan and the possible engagement of Pakistani investors in benefiting from it.
The regulatory framework operating in Pakistan, red-tape culture and lack of information about the plan getting onto the ground might be major impediments as far as the investing community is concerned.
The most relevant person to approach in this context was Zaheeruddin Dar, a former public finance bureaucrat now running his own consultancy organisation in the name of Development Analysis Research Team (DART).
About the opposition to CPEC from an Indian lobby he said, “it is in the interest of the Indian economy to integrate to this plan. It benefit the Indian economy to be part of the future facilitation available in trading with entities operating from Kolkata to Moscow and Beijing via Central Asia and Pakistan, Iran and Afghanistan.”
Pakistan needs to block India’s move to become regional sheriff
As far as the present regulatory structure and the red-tape culture in Pakistan are concerned, he said “there will be pressure on bureaucracy from the government and the business community to mend its ways. I do not see potential bureaucratic opposition in this context, so the situation might not be as cloudy as many people might conceive”.
Dar thought “a new regulatory framework might be in the offing as soon as the business community, both inland and from abroad presses for basic changes”.
“Chinese companies have already begun seeking joint ventures and takeovers in Pakistan in the run up to CPEC infrastructure layout on the ground,” he added. “As far as Pakistani investors are concerned, the sectors most of them might choose would be light engineering, foods and garments.”
According to him, there is a lot of information the government tends to hold back on CPEC from the likely and potential investors. It can be vital information to the intending investors whose main source of information is the official documents. “Such information is also needed as far as public and media are concerned.”
Dar thought the government might eventually liberalise the flow of information as far as CPEC is concerned. The law now in vogue to enforce access to information might also help in this connection.
Pakistan aware of hostility towards CPEC
“The Chinese companies and officials do not face impediments in getting such information through, but its free flow might give a boost to the potential engagement of the trading and investing communities with the CPEC plan. They have never experienced such an opportunity and the methods of availing them might be slow to become public knowledge.”
He thought a large chunk of the foreign investment for the CPEC projects might come from the Chinese investors. As far as consensus in Pakistan on CPEC is concerned, he said it was evolving and there was growing anticipation in Pakistan that CPEC would accelerate trade and industry, including the stock exchange in this country.
According to his information, the Pak-China relevant organisations and officials were engaged productively in exchanging notes on developments taking place as far as the CPEC infrastructure is concerned.
The first phase in this context would be completed by the end of 2020.
Progress on investment from the Pakistani entrepreneurs and the foreign investors might be seen between 2020 and 2025.
“The CPEC might show its most potential results by 2030,” said Dar, adding that it would be then that the region would see results of the entire activity from India to Russia and Afghanistan to the shores of Burma and adjoining lands. He did not think that there was cause for pessimism in the CPEC context. However, it was up to the institutions and investors in Pakistan to take advantage of the situation triggered by the CPEC plan, which might be unprecedented in terms of development.
The writer has worked with major newspapers and specialises in the analysis of public finance and geo-economics of terrorism
Published in The Express Tribune, September 5th, 2016.