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The Great Game Changer: Belt and Road Intiative (BRI; OBOR)

World's biggest building project aims to make China great again
The ‘Belt and Road initiative’ could see hundreds of billions spent from Mongolia to Malaysia, Thailand to Turkmenistan and Indonesia to Iran

by Tom Phillips in Tashkurgan
Friday 12 May 2017 01.25 BST

When the Chinese president, Xi Jinping, unveiled what some call the most ambitious development plan in history, Zhou Jun decided almost immediately he should head for the hills.

The 45-year-old entrepreneur packed his bags and set off for one of his country’s most staggeringly beautiful corners: a sleepy, high-altitude border outpost called Tashkurgan that - at almost 5,000km (3,100 miles) from Beijing - is the most westerly settlement in China.

“I saw a great opportunity to turn this little town into a mid-sized city,” Zhou explained during a tour of ‘Europa Manor’, a garish roadside spa he recently opened for Chinese tourists along the Karakoram, the legendary 1,300km highway that snakes through China’s rugged western mountains towards the 4,700m-high Khunjerab Pass.

Zhou said he was part of a wave of entrepreneurs now pouring into this isolated frontier near Pakistan, Afghanistan and Tajikistan, hoping to cash in on President Xi’s “Belt and Road initiative”, a multi-billion dollar infrastructure campaign that looks set to transform large swaths of Asia and the world beyond.

“This place is going to see big changes,” predicted Zhou, who hails from the central city of Xi’an, as he guided his visitors through an R&R centre filled with plunge pools, wicker chaise lounges and fake plastic trees.

2954.jpg

Tajik women who are optimistic about the region’s redevelopment. Photograph: Tom Phillips for the Guardian

This weekend world leaders including Russian president Vladimir Putin, Pakistani prime minister Nawaz Sharif and Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan will gather in Beijing to celebrate Xi’s plan, which supporters hail as the start of a new era of globalisation but sceptics see as a strategic ploy to cement China’s position as Asia’s top dog.

“The Belt and Road forum will go down as a landmark event in the history of Chinese foreign policy,” boasted a frontpage commentary in the Communist party’s official mouthpiece, the People’s Daily, on the eve of the event, which bears the unfortunate English acronym “Barf”.

As the last stop on the Karakoram before the border with Pakistan, Tashkurgan stands on the front line of one of the most ambitious components of Xi’s project: the $62bn China-Pakistan economic corridor (Cpec).

Officials in Beijing and Islamabad claim the corridor – a vast web of planned infrastructure projects running diagonally from the resource-rich region of Xinjiang in western China to the deep-water port of Gwadar on Pakistan’s Arabian coast – will spark an “economic revolution” in the south Asian country.

Tashkurgan, an isolated town on China's border with Pakistan, is set to witness major changes as Beijing pushes ahead with a $900bn development plan

The jaw-dropping landscape of glaciers and grasslands around Tashkurgan, an ancient Silk Road trading hub that is home to China’s Tajik ethnic minority, has changed little in hundreds, if not thousands, of years. “It is worth a journey from England merely to see this place,” the British adventurer Robert Shaw marvelledafter trekking through the region’s “stupendous peaks” in the late 1860s.

2954.jpg

Children in the town of Tashkurgan. Photograph: Tom Phillips for the Guardian

“The next 10 years are going to bring tremendous change,” Zhou boasted. He claimed, with a heavy dose of hyperbole, that the town’s future might resemble that of skyscraper-studded mega-cities such as Shanghai and Guangzhou.

Muzaffar Shah, a Pakistani salesman who was passing through the Chinese city on his way back from a shopping expedition to the bazaars of Kashgar, said he also sensed change was coming.

Shah remembered his first trip to Tashkurgan, in 1993, when “it was nothing”. “This is growing very fast [now] – very, very fast,” he added over a plate of yak curry by the Karakoram, which Chinese travellers call the China-Pakistan Friendship Highway. “Everything has changed.”

Over the coming years Tashkurgan is unlikely to be the only place to feel the effects of China’s infrastructure crusade, which some compare to America’s post-war Marshall plan to rebuild Europe.

From Mongolia to Malaysia, Thailand to Turkmenistan and Indonesia to Iran, a slew of Chinese projects, including power plants, solar farms, motorways, bridges, ports and high-speed rail links, are set to be built with support from China’s banks and work force.

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According to some estimates, China will bankroll some $150bn of infrastructure projects each year in countries that embrace Xi’s signature foreign policy initiative.

Tom Miller, the author of a recent book about Xi’s Asian infrastructure blitz, said the Belt and Road schemes were part of a vast wave of Chinese capital that was now “washing over the world”.

So many economic and geo-political goals lay behind the program that it defied one simple definition but essentially it was Xi’s answer to Donald Trump’s #MAGA: “Let’s Make China Great Again”.

“It is part of a push to cement China’s position as the undisputed power of Asia,” he said.

“China’s greatest strengths are financial – it has enormous economic muscle – and building infrastructure. So it is putting those things together and using its economic diplomacy to build roads, railways, ports, powerlines [that will help] integrate Asia [and] puts China at the centre of Asia.”

“It is very significant because China is the only country that has the capacity to build infrastructure like this and the only country that is willing to do it,” Miller added.

“You can be very sceptical about what the Belt and Road itself means … but nobody doubts that China is lending a lot of money and building a lot of stuff.”

The winds of change have already been blowing in Tashkurgan and affecting its 40,000-strong population.

Physically and culturally, the town, which is the main home of the Sarikoli-speaking Tajik minority, is about as far from Beijing as you can get, without crossing China’s 22,000km border.

An exhibit at the local government museum, the Tajik Folk Culture Exhibition Hall, describes its natives as having “typical features of Caucasian race, with light skin coloration, golden yellow or dark brown hair, dark blue or gray brown eyes, thin lip, high nose, not high cheekbone, developed body hair and beard.”

Slowly, however, the make-up of the population is changing. Locals say the last decade has seen a major influx of Mandarin-speaking immigrants from China’s ethnic Han majority after the government began trying to boost the local economy by turning the picturesque border town into a tourist destination.

Those efforts intensified following an outbreak of deadly ethnic rioting in Xinjiang’s capital, Urumqi, in 2009 as authorities began pushing for a burst of “leapfrog” economic development that might calm the province’s violence-hit south.

Miller said one of the Belt and Road initiative’s key aims was to bring development and stability to China’s deprived periphery by linking such regions with overseas markets.

“Particularly in Xinjiang, China believes that economic development can help solve some of the security questions with its own militant Muslim minority and Islamist problems over the borders. They think that if you give people jobs and economic hope then perhaps they will be less inclined to foment insurgencies and other things,” he said.

“I think they are mistaken there … but that is how they think,” Miller added.

The ever-present security forces on Tashkurgan’s otherwise tranquil streets give it the feel of an Alpine resort crossed with the West Bank and public expressions of dissent are rare.

Asked how they felt about the town’s future, locals firmly stuck to the party line and said they were hopeful Xi’s project would inject new life into the area.

“We fully support the Belt and Road initiative,” beamed Narzi Baygim, a 23-year-old Tajik tour guide who said she hoped it would bring more tourists to the region. “I think it will help connect China to other countries and to promote friendship.”

Rebiya, a 22-year-old interpreter, said she was glad to have been born and raised in such a scenic and pristine corner of China. “Living here is like living in heaven,” she said.

But development was welcome, she said, shrugging off the suggestion that Tajik traditions might be diluted by the influx of outsiders.

“[Our culture] has been passed down over the past 2,000 years and has become part of our DNA,” she said. “I don’t think it will vanish just because of economic development.”

While business people are banking on the transformation of the region around Tashkurgan, not everyone is convinced the reality will live up to Xi’s grand vision. Some point out that since the Belt and Road initiative began in 2013 trade between Xinjiang and foreign countries has actually fallen.

Rahber Khan, the owner of a Pakistani restaurant near the town’s main square, said he feared most Chinese investment was destined for the strategic port of Gwadar, not the impoverished region where his family lived.

“Maybe in the future we are growing but right now we don’t see anything good in front of us,” said Khan, 39, who is originally from Ghulkin, a village just over the border.

“I’m not sure if it’s coming or not,” he said of plans to connect Pakistan and China with the Khunjerab railway, adding: “It’s just talking.”

Before this weekend’s summit in Beijing, China has trumpeted its commitment to the “game-changing” initiative in a barrage of state-sponsored propaganda.

“At a time when certain western powers are retreating into protectionism and isolation, China has been promoting the globalisation of the economy in a spirit of openness and inclusiveness,” the official news agency Xinhua declared.

The English-language China Daily newspaper described the drive as “one of the most important public goods China offers the world”.

Outside Khan’s restaurant, the Communist party has also set out its stall, stamping its message onto a giant red billboard that towers over Tashkurgan’s main square.

“Build a beautiful Xinjiang!” the sign reads. “Make a Chinese dream come true!”

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/may/12/chinese-president-belt-and-road-initiative
 
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US to send top adviser to China’s Belt and Road summit as part of Sino-US trade deal

PUBLISHED : Friday, 12 May, 2017, 2:16pm
UPDATED : Friday, 12 May, 2017, 2:24pm

By Wendy Wu, Zhuang Pinghui, Stuart Lau - SCMP

The United States will send a delegation led by a top White House adviser to the ‘Belt and Road’ summit in Beijing this weekend as part of a trade deal between China and Washington.

The US’ attendance at the upcoming two-day forum that starts on Sunday was listed among the 10-point initial results of the 100-Day action Plan of the US-China Comprehensive Economic Dialogue, released by China on Friday.

China reaches out to South Korea with late invite to global trade meeting

The forum will see state leaders and delegations discuss President Xi Jinping’s trade and infrastructure development initiative.

Matt Pottinger, Special Assistant to the President and senior director for East Asia of National Security Council of the White House, will lead the US delegation, the US embassy said on Friday.

The United States recognises the importance of China’s One Belt and One Road initiative and is to send delegates to attend the Belt and Road Forum May 14-15 in Beijing,” according to the joint release by China’s finance and commerce ministries on Friday.


Washington’s attendance at the summit was a concrete result of Xi’s trade plan, finance vice-minister Zhu Guangyao told a press conference on Friday morning.

North Korea’s invitation to China’s Belt and Road summit ‘may cast shadow over UN sanctions’

China and US should cooperate in bilateral economic areas, but also step up policy coordination in economy in a wider range in the world. I have participated in the negotiation of the initial results, and the 10th point [US attendance] was raised by US and China welcomes that,” Zhu said.

China welcomed all countries’ participation in the initiative, he added.
 
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Good for China and the region at large.:china:


China believes that economic development can help solve some of the security questions with its own militant Muslim minority and Islamist problems over the borders. They think that if you give people jobs and economic hope then perhaps they will be less inclined to foment insurgencies and other things,
Agreed with this strategy. Keep people busy so they dont enough time to think otherwise.:enjoy:
 
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World's biggest building project aims to make China great again

The ‘Belt and Road initiative’ could see hundreds of billions spent from Mongolia to Malaysia, Thailand to Turkmenistan and Indonesia to Iran

by Tom Phillips in Tashkurgan

Friday 12 May 2017 01.25 BST

When the Chinese president, Xi Jinping, unveiled what some call the most ambitious development plan in history, Zhou Jun decided almost immediately he should head for the hills.

The 45-year-old entrepreneur packed his bags and set off for one of his country’s most staggeringly beautiful corners: a sleepy, high-altitude border outpost called Tashkurgan that - at almost 5,000km (3,100 miles) from Beijing - is the most westerly settlement in China.

“I saw a great opportunity to turn this little town into a mid-sized city,” Zhou explained during a tour of ‘Europa Manor’, a garish roadside spa he recently opened for Chinese tourists along the Karakoram, the legendary 1,300km highway that snakes through China’s rugged western mountains towards the 4,700m-high Khunjerab Pass.

Zhou said he was part of a wave of entrepreneurs now pouring into this isolated frontier near Pakistan, Afghanistan and Tajikistan, hoping to cash in on President Xi’s “Belt and Road initiative”, a multi-billion dollar infrastructure campaign that looks set to transform large swaths of Asia and the world beyond.

“This place is going to see big changes,” predicted Zhou, who hails from the central city of Xi’an, as he guided his visitors through an R&R centre filled with plunge pools, wicker chaise lounges and fake plastic trees.

2954.jpg

Tajik women who are optimistic about the region’s redevelopment. Photograph: Tom Phillips for the Guardian

This weekend world leaders including Russian president Vladimir Putin, Pakistani prime minister Nawaz Sharif and Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan will gather in Beijing to celebrate Xi’s plan, which supporters hail as the start of a new era of globalisation but sceptics see as a strategic ploy to cement China’s position as Asia’s top dog.

“The Belt and Road forum will go down as a landmark event in the history of Chinese foreign policy,” boasted a frontpage commentary in the Communist party’s official mouthpiece, the People’s Daily, on the eve of the event, which bears the unfortunate English acronym “Barf”.

As the last stop on the Karakoram before the border with Pakistan, Tashkurgan stands on the front line of one of the most ambitious components of Xi’s project: the $62bn China-Pakistan economic corridor (Cpec).

Officials in Beijing and Islamabad claim the corridor – a vast web of planned infrastructure projects running diagonally from the resource-rich region of Xinjiang in western China to the deep-water port of Gwadar on Pakistan’s Arabian coast – will spark an “economic revolution” in the south Asian country.


The jaw-dropping landscape of glaciers and grasslands around Tashkurgan, an ancient Silk Road trading hub that is home to China’s Tajik ethnic minority, has changed little in hundreds, if not thousands, of years. “It is worth a journey from England merely to see this place,” the British adventurer Robert Shaw marvelledafter trekking through the region’s “stupendous peaks” in the late 1860s.

2954.jpg

Children in the town of Tashkurgan. Photograph: Tom Phillips for the Guardian

But this obscure and secluded town is now bracing for a revolution of its own, as authorities cook up grand plans to transform it and the surrounding region.

In order to ferry people and equipment into this far-flung outpost, which is seven hours’ drive from the nearest major city, one of China’s highest altitude airports is being built just south of town on the Pamir plateau, a sparsely inhabited region previously the preserve of farmers, nomads and yaks.

Construction teams on both sides of the border have been rebuilding some of the most treacherous stretches of the Karakoram, the world’s highest transnational highway and a project that took two decades and more than 1,000 lives to build.

Further ahead, there are spectacular plans to build the so-called Khunjerab railway, a high-altitude line that would run roughly alongside the Karakoram and link north-eastern Pakistan with the Chinese city of Kashgar.

Such proposals are music to the ears of fortune-seekers such as Zhou who have flocked to this landlocked town to open improbably named businesses such as the Sea Front International Hotel.

2954.jpg

Passengers sit in an open topped vehicle on the Karakoram Highway, Photograph: Tom Phillips for the Guardian

“The next 10 years are going to bring tremendous change,” Zhou boasted. He claimed, with a heavy dose of hyperbole, that the town’s future might resemble that of skyscraper-studded mega-cities such as Shanghai and Guangzhou.

Muzaffar Shah, a Pakistani salesman who was passing through the Chinese city on his way back from a shopping expedition to the bazaars of Kashgar, said he also sensed change was coming.

Shah remembered his first trip to Tashkurgan, in 1993, when “it was nothing”. “This is growing very fast [now] – very, very fast,” he added over a plate of yak curry by the Karakoram, which Chinese travellers call the China-Pakistan Friendship Highway. “Everything has changed.”

Over the coming years Tashkurgan is unlikely to be the only place to feel the effects of China’s infrastructure crusade, which some compare to America’s post-war Marshall plan to rebuild Europe.

2954.jpg

Nuyuft Arkin, a 45-year- old farmer, outside the new home on the outskirts of Tashkurgan. Photograph: Tom Phillips for the Guardian

From Mongolia to Malaysia, Thailand to Turkmenistan and Indonesia to Iran, a slew of Chinese projects, including power plants, solar farms, motorways, bridges, ports and high-speed rail links, are set to be built with support from China’s banks and work force.

According to some estimates, China will bankroll some $150bn of infrastructure projects each year in countries that embrace Xi’s signature foreign policy initiative.

Tom Miller, the author of a recent book about Xi’s Asian infrastructure blitz, said the Belt and Road schemes were part of a vast wave of Chinese capital that was now “washing over the world”.

So many economic and geo-political goals lay behind the program that it defied one simple definition but essentially it was Xi’s answer to Donald Trump’s #MAGA: “Let’s Make China Great Again”.

“It is part of a push to cement China’s position as the undisputed power of Asia,” he said.

“China’s greatest strengths are financial – it has enormous economic muscle – and building infrastructure. So it is putting those things together and using its economic diplomacy to build roads, railways, ports, powerlines [that will help] integrate Asia [and] puts China at the centre of Asia.”

“It is very significant because China is the only country that has the capacity to build infrastructure like this and the only country that is willing to do it,” Miller added.

“You can be very sceptical about what the Belt and Road itself means … but nobody doubts that China is lending a lot of money and building a lot of stuff.”

The winds of change have already been blowing in Tashkurgan and affecting its 40,000-strong population.

Physically and culturally, the town, which is the main home of the Sarikoli-speaking Tajik minority, is about as far from Beijing as you can get, without crossing China’s 22,000km border.

An exhibit at the local government museum, the Tajik Folk Culture Exhibition Hall, describes its natives as having “typical features of Caucasian race, with light skin coloration, golden yellow or dark brown hair, dark blue or gray brown eyes, thin lip, high nose, not high cheekbone, developed body hair and beard.”

Slowly, however, the make-up of the population is changing. Locals say the last decade has seen a major influx of Mandarin-speaking immigrants from China’s ethnic Han majority after the government began trying to boost the local economy by turning the picturesque border town into a tourist destination.

Those efforts intensified following an outbreak of deadly ethnic rioting in Xinjiang’s capital, Urumqi, in 2009 as authorities began pushing for a burst of “leapfrog” economic development that might calm the province’s violence-hit south.

Miller said one of the Belt and Road initiative’s key aims was to bring development and stability to China’s deprived periphery by linking such regions with overseas markets.

“Particularly in Xinjiang, China believes that economic development can help solve some of the security questions with its own militant Muslim minority and Islamist problems over the borders. They think that if you give people jobs and economic hope then perhaps they will be less inclined to foment insurgencies and other things,” he said.

“I think they are mistaken there … but that is how they think,” Miller added.

2954.jpg

A Chinese flag flies over Tashkurgan. Photograph: Tom Phillips for the Guardian

The ever-present security forces on Tashkurgan’s otherwise tranquil streets give it the feel of an Alpine resort crossed with the West Bank and public expressions of dissent are rare.

Asked how they felt about the town’s future, locals firmly stuck to the party line and said they were hopeful Xi’s project would inject new life into the area.

“We fully support the Belt and Road initiative,” beamed Narzi Baygim, a 23-year-old Tajik tour guide who said she hoped it would bring more tourists to the region. “I think it will help connect China to other countries and to promote friendship.”

Rebiya, a 22-year-old interpreter, said she was glad to have been born and raised in such a scenic and pristine corner of China. “Living here is like living in heaven,” she said.

But development was welcome, she said, shrugging off the suggestion that Tajik traditions might be diluted by the influx of outsiders.

“[Our culture] has been passed down over the past 2,000 years and has become part of our DNA,” she said. “I don’t think it will vanish just because of economic development.”

While business people are banking on the transformation of the region around Tashkurgan, not everyone is convinced the reality will live up to Xi’s grand vision. Some point out that since the Belt and Road initiative began in 2013 trade between Xinjiang and foreign countries has actually fallen.

Rahber Khan, the owner of a Pakistani restaurant near the town’s main square, said he feared most Chinese investment was destined for the strategic port of Gwadar, not the impoverished region where his family lived.

“Maybe in the future we are growing but right now we don’t see anything good in front of us,” said Khan, 39, who is originally from Ghulkin, a village just over the border.

“I’m not sure if it’s coming or not,” he said of plans to connect Pakistan and China with the Khunjerab railway, adding: “It’s just talking.”

Before this weekend’s summit in Beijing, China has trumpeted its commitment to the “game-changing” initiative in a barrage of state-sponsored propaganda.

“At a time when certain western powers are retreating into protectionism and isolation, China has been promoting the globalisation of the economy in a spirit of openness and inclusiveness,” the official news agency Xinhua declared.

The English-language China Daily newspaper described the drive as “one of the most important public goods China offers the world”.

Outside Khan’s restaurant, the Communist party has also set out its stall, stamping its message onto a giant red billboard that towers over Tashkurgan’s main square.

“Build a beautiful Xinjiang!” the sign reads. “Make a Chinese dream come true!”

Additional reporting by Wang Zhen

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/may/12/chinese-president-belt-and-road-initiative
 
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Indonesia to join China's initiated economic pact

Antara News - 10th May 2017

Jakarta (ANTARA News) - Transport Minister Budi Karya Sumadi said Indonesia will join China's initiated economic cooperation pact "One Belt One Road" (OBOR).

"To be sure, we will join and take participation in it, as it will be difficult for us to raise fund out side the state budget for investment. Our budget fund would be enough to cover only 30 percent of the total fund requirement for our investment projects," Budi Karya Sumadi said after the opening of the 2nd Ministerial Conference of the Indian Ocean Rim Association (IORA) on Blue Economy here on Wednesday.

President Joko Widodo is scheduled to attend the OBOR economic forum in Beijing, on 14 May 2017. The forum is expected to be attended by leaders of 138 countries.

Budi said Indonesia joining OBOR is naturally expected as currently China is the world largest investing country, while the countrys state budget could not finance its ambitious infrastructure projects.

"In my opinion it is something common if we enter an international system we could use for our benefit," he said.

He said a team is preparing a proposal related to transport infrastructure to OBOR including railways, seaport and airports.

Other ministers may have their own proposals. The cabinet Ministers to accompany President Joko Widodo to attend the Beijing forum include Coordinating Minister for Maritime Affairs Luhut Pandjaitan, Foreign Minister Retno Marsudi, and Transport Minister Budi Karya Sumadi.(*)

-----------------

Antara (news agency)

Antara is an Indonesian news agency organized as a private company under the Ministry of State-owned Enterprises. It is the country's national news agency, supplying news reports to the many domestic media organization. It is the only organization authorized to distribute news material created by foreign news agencies.
 
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The United States will send a delegation led by a top White House adviser to the ‘Belt and Road’ summit in Beijing this weekend as part of a trade deal between China and Washington.

The US’ attendance at the upcoming two-day forum that starts on Sunday was listed among the 10-point initial results of the 100-Day action Plan of the US-China Comprehensive Economic Dialogue, released by China on Friday.

China reaches out to South Korea with late invite to global trade meeting

The forum will see state leaders and delegations discuss President Xi Jinping’s trade and infrastructure development initiative.

Matt Pottinger, Special Assistant to the President and senior director for East Asia of National Security Council of the White House, will lead the US delegation, the US embassy said on Friday.

“The United States recognises the importance of China’s One Belt and One Road initiative and is to send delegates to attend the Belt and Road Forum May 14-15 in Beijing,” according to the joint release by China’s finance and commerce ministries on Friday.
Washington’s attendance at the summit was a concrete result of Xi’s trade plan, finance vice-minister Zhu Guangyao told a press conference on Friday morning.
North Korea’s invitation to China’s Belt and Road summit ‘may cast shadow over UN sanctions’

“China and US should cooperate in bilateral economic areas, but also step up policy coordination in economy in a wider range in the world. I have participated in the negotiation of the initial results, and the 10th point [US attendance] was raised by US and China welcomes that,” Zhu said.

China welcomed all countries’ participation in the initiative, he added.



http://www.scmp.com/news/china/dipl...-top-adviser-chinas-belt-and-road-summit-part
 
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THE BELT AND ROAD INITIATIVE

Belt_Road_Forum.jpg


On May 14-15, 2017 Chinese President Xi Jinping will host the leaders of 29 countries and representatives from at least 54 countries at the Belt and Road Forum in Beijing. Announced in 2013, the Belt and Road Initiative (also known as One Belt, One Road or OBOR) aims to strengthen China’s connectivity with the world. It combines new and old projects, covers an expansive geographic scope, and includes efforts to strengthen hard infrastructure, soft infrastructure, and cultural ties. At present, the plan extends to 65 countries with a combined Gross Domestic Product of $23 trillion and includes some 4.4 billion people.

obor2015.jpg


One Belt One Road Forum Attendees

Country - Head of State Attendees:
  1. Argentina President Mauricio Macri
  2. Belarus President Alexander Lukashenko
  3. Cambodia Prime Minister Hun Sen
  4. Chile President Michelle Bachelet
  5. Czech Republic President Milos Zeman
  6. Ethiopia Prime Minister Hailemariam Desalegn
  7. Fiji Prime Minister Josaia Voreqe Bainimarama
  8. Greece Prime Minister Alexis Tsipras
  9. Hungary Prime Minister Viktor Orban
  10. Indonesia President Joko Widodo
  11. Italy Prime Minister Paolo Gentiloni
  12. Kazakhstan President Nursultan Nazarbayev
  13. Kenya President Uhuru Kenyatta
  14. Laos President Bounnhang Vorachith
  15. Malaysia Prime Minister Najib Razak
  16. Mongolia Prime Minister Jargaltulga Erdenebat
  17. Myanmar State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi
  18. Pakistan Prime Minister Muhammad Nawaz Sharif
  19. Philippines President Rodrigo Duterte
  20. Poland Prime Minister Beata Szydlo
  21. Russia President Vladimir Putin
  22. Serbia Prime Minister Aleksandar Vucic
  23. Saint Martin Prime Minister William Marlin
  24. Spain Prime Minister Mariano Rajoy
  25. Sri Lanka Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe
  26. Switzerland President Doris Leuthard
  27. Turkey President Recep Tayyip Erdogan
  28. Uzbekistan President Shavkat Mirziyoyev
  29. Vietnam President Tran Dai Quang

PLUS those delegations from following nations:
  1. Afghanistan
  2. Albania
  3. Armenia
  4. Australia
  5. Azerbaijan
  6. Bahrain
  7. Bangladesh
  8. Bhutan
  9. Bosnia and Herzegovina
  10. Brunei
  11. Bulgaria
  12. Croatia
  13. Egypt
  14. Estonia
  15. Ethiopia
  16. France
  17. Georgia
  18. Germany
  19. Iran
  20. Iraq
  21. Israel
  22. Japan
  23. Jordan
  24. Kuwait
  25. Kyrgyzstan
  26. Latvia
  27. Lebanon
  28. Lithuania
  29. Macedonia
  30. Maldives
  31. Moldova
  32. Montenegro
  33. Nepal
  34. NewZealand
  35. North Korea
  36. Oman
  37. Palestine
  38. Qatar
  39. Romania
  40. Saudi Arabia
  41. Singapore
  42. Slovakia
  43. Slovenia
  44. South Africa
  45. South Korea
  46. Syria
  47. Tajikistan
  48. Thailand
  49. Timor Leste
  50. Turkmenistan
  51. Ukraine
  52. United Arab Emirates
  53. United Kingdom
  54. Yemen


And several international organizations will be well-represented too, with UN Secretary General António Guterres, President of the World Bank Jim Yong Kim, and Managing Director of the International Monetary Fund Christine Lagarde all set to attend.

SEE: The Belt and Road Initiative: The Defining Project of our Century | LaRouche PAC
 
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China pushes back on West’s One Belt, One Road narrative

Is OBOR "colonization" or “the China solution for global economic revival”?

By Asia Unhedged - Asia Times - May 12, 2017 2:00 AM (UTC+8)

One-_Belt-_One-_Road-630x378.jpg

The title "New Silk Road, New Dream" is emblazoned accross Xinhua News Agency's One Belt, One Road page. Source: Xinhua

With the One Belt, One Road forum hosting leaders from around the world this weekend in Beijing, the battle to define the massive global initiative is heating up.

Leading English language papers have pumped out skeptical headlines in recent weeks, such as “The Folly of Investing in China’s ‘One Belt, One Road’” from the Wall Street Journal, and the New York Times’ “Is China the World’s New Colonial Power?”. The Financial Times proclaimed this week that “China’s ‘Belt and Road’ vision struggles to leave port”.

Is this skeptical portrayal of what might be the biggest overseas investment push in history fair?

Certainly the Chinese press has something to say about that, as the excitement from most corners of the world will be on display at the forum this weekend.

China’s Xinhua News Agency has been churning out headlines such as “One Belt, One Road creates a new model for globalization”, and “[OBOR] provides opportunity for Europe’s revival”, while the People’s Daily proclaimed “[OBOR] is leading a new wave of globalization”.

English language commentary from Xinhua last week asked the question, “Why do Western commentators look at China’s Belt and Road Initiative with Cold War prejudice?” The article cites Western critics that have compared OBOR to the US-led Marshall Plan for post-World War II reconstruction and the 19 th century Great Game, during which Britain and Russia competed for control of central Asia.

The Chinese press has emphasized Beijing’s insistence that OBOR investments represent a win-win opportunity for China and other countries involved. The enthusiasm shown by the 29 world leaders attending the forum this weekend is proof that many agree, especially at a time when the US appears to be receding from the world stage.

Many Western media outlets write that they are worried, from an investment point of view, that the initiative will falter. But it seems likely that many in the West are more worried about the initiatives’ success.

* * * * *

Belt and Road Initiative
http://www.xinhuanet.com/silkroad/english/index.htm
 
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World's biggest building project aims to make China great again

The ‘Belt and Road initiative’ could see hundreds of billions spent from Mongolia to Malaysia, Thailand to Turkmenistan and Indonesia to Iran

by Tom Phillips in Tashkurgan

Friday 12 May 2017 01.25 BST

When the Chinese president, Xi Jinping, unveiled what some call the most ambitious development plan in history, Zhou Jun decided almost immediately he should head for the hills.

The 45-year-old entrepreneur packed his bags and set off for one of his country’s most staggeringly beautiful corners: a sleepy, high-altitude border outpost called Tashkurgan that - at almost 5,000km (3,100 miles) from Beijing - is the most westerly settlement in China.

“I saw a great opportunity to turn this little town into a mid-sized city,” Zhou explained during a tour of ‘Europa Manor’, a garish roadside spa he recently opened for Chinese tourists along the Karakoram, the legendary 1,300km highway that snakes through China’s rugged western mountains towards the 4,700m-high Khunjerab Pass.

Zhou said he was part of a wave of entrepreneurs now pouring into this isolated frontier near Pakistan, Afghanistan and Tajikistan, hoping to cash in on President Xi’s “Belt and Road initiative”, a multi-billion dollar infrastructure campaign that looks set to transform large swaths of Asia and the world beyond.

“This place is going to see big changes,” predicted Zhou, who hails from the central city of Xi’an, as he guided his visitors through an R&R centre filled with plunge pools, wicker chaise lounges and fake plastic trees.

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Tajik women who are optimistic about the region’s redevelopment. Photograph: Tom Phillips for the Guardian

This weekend world leaders including Russian president Vladimir Putin, Pakistani prime minister Nawaz Sharif and Turkish president Recep Tayyip Erdoğan will gather in Beijing to celebrate Xi’s plan, which supporters hail as the start of a new era of globalisation but sceptics see as a strategic ploy to cement China’s position as Asia’s top dog.

“The Belt and Road forum will go down as a landmark event in the history of Chinese foreign policy,” boasted a frontpage commentary in the Communist party’s official mouthpiece, the People’s Daily, on the eve of the event, which bears the unfortunate English acronym “Barf”.

As the last stop on the Karakoram before the border with Pakistan, Tashkurgan stands on the front line of one of the most ambitious components of Xi’s project: the $62bn China-Pakistan economic corridor (Cpec).

Officials in Beijing and Islamabad claim the corridor – a vast web of planned infrastructure projects running diagonally from the resource-rich region of Xinjiang in western China to the deep-water port of Gwadar on Pakistan’s Arabian coast – will spark an “economic revolution” in the south Asian country.


The jaw-dropping landscape of glaciers and grasslands around Tashkurgan, an ancient Silk Road trading hub that is home to China’s Tajik ethnic minority, has changed little in hundreds, if not thousands, of years. “It is worth a journey from England merely to see this place,” the British adventurer Robert Shaw marvelledafter trekking through the region’s “stupendous peaks” in the late 1860s.

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Children in the town of Tashkurgan. Photograph: Tom Phillips for the Guardian

But this obscure and secluded town is now bracing for a revolution of its own, as authorities cook up grand plans to transform it and the surrounding region.

In order to ferry people and equipment into this far-flung outpost, which is seven hours’ drive from the nearest major city, one of China’s highest altitude airports is being built just south of town on the Pamir plateau, a sparsely inhabited region previously the preserve of farmers, nomads and yaks.

Construction teams on both sides of the border have been rebuilding some of the most treacherous stretches of the Karakoram, the world’s highest transnational highway and a project that took two decades and more than 1,000 lives to build.

Further ahead, there are spectacular plans to build the so-called Khunjerab railway, a high-altitude line that would run roughly alongside the Karakoram and link north-eastern Pakistan with the Chinese city of Kashgar.

Such proposals are music to the ears of fortune-seekers such as Zhou who have flocked to this landlocked town to open improbably named businesses such as the Sea Front International Hotel.

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Passengers sit in an open topped vehicle on the Karakoram Highway, Photograph: Tom Phillips for the Guardian

“The next 10 years are going to bring tremendous change,” Zhou boasted. He claimed, with a heavy dose of hyperbole, that the town’s future might resemble that of skyscraper-studded mega-cities such as Shanghai and Guangzhou.

Muzaffar Shah, a Pakistani salesman who was passing through the Chinese city on his way back from a shopping expedition to the bazaars of Kashgar, said he also sensed change was coming.

Shah remembered his first trip to Tashkurgan, in 1993, when “it was nothing”. “This is growing very fast [now] – very, very fast,” he added over a plate of yak curry by the Karakoram, which Chinese travellers call the China-Pakistan Friendship Highway. “Everything has changed.”

Over the coming years Tashkurgan is unlikely to be the only place to feel the effects of China’s infrastructure crusade, which some compare to America’s post-war Marshall plan to rebuild Europe.

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Nuyuft Arkin, a 45-year- old farmer, outside the new home on the outskirts of Tashkurgan. Photograph: Tom Phillips for the Guardian

From Mongolia to Malaysia, Thailand to Turkmenistan and Indonesia to Iran, a slew of Chinese projects, including power plants, solar farms, motorways, bridges, ports and high-speed rail links, are set to be built with support from China’s banks and work force.

According to some estimates, China will bankroll some $150bn of infrastructure projects each year in countries that embrace Xi’s signature foreign policy initiative.

Tom Miller, the author of a recent book about Xi’s Asian infrastructure blitz, said the Belt and Road schemes were part of a vast wave of Chinese capital that was now “washing over the world”.

So many economic and geo-political goals lay behind the program that it defied one simple definition but essentially it was Xi’s answer to Donald Trump’s #MAGA: “Let’s Make China Great Again”.

“It is part of a push to cement China’s position as the undisputed power of Asia,” he said.

“China’s greatest strengths are financial – it has enormous economic muscle – and building infrastructure. So it is putting those things together and using its economic diplomacy to build roads, railways, ports, powerlines [that will help] integrate Asia [and] puts China at the centre of Asia.”

“It is very significant because China is the only country that has the capacity to build infrastructure like this and the only country that is willing to do it,” Miller added.

“You can be very sceptical about what the Belt and Road itself means … but nobody doubts that China is lending a lot of money and building a lot of stuff.”

The winds of change have already been blowing in Tashkurgan and affecting its 40,000-strong population.

Physically and culturally, the town, which is the main home of the Sarikoli-speaking Tajik minority, is about as far from Beijing as you can get, without crossing China’s 22,000km border.

An exhibit at the local government museum, the Tajik Folk Culture Exhibition Hall, describes its natives as having “typical features of Caucasian race, with light skin coloration, golden yellow or dark brown hair, dark blue or gray brown eyes, thin lip, high nose, not high cheekbone, developed body hair and beard.”

Slowly, however, the make-up of the population is changing. Locals say the last decade has seen a major influx of Mandarin-speaking immigrants from China’s ethnic Han majority after the government began trying to boost the local economy by turning the picturesque border town into a tourist destination.

Those efforts intensified following an outbreak of deadly ethnic rioting in Xinjiang’s capital, Urumqi, in 2009 as authorities began pushing for a burst of “leapfrog” economic development that might calm the province’s violence-hit south.

Miller said one of the Belt and Road initiative’s key aims was to bring development and stability to China’s deprived periphery by linking such regions with overseas markets.

“Particularly in Xinjiang, China believes that economic development can help solve some of the security questions with its own militant Muslim minority and Islamist problems over the borders. They think that if you give people jobs and economic hope then perhaps they will be less inclined to foment insurgencies and other things,” he said.

“I think they are mistaken there … but that is how they think,” Miller added.

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A Chinese flag flies over Tashkurgan. Photograph: Tom Phillips for the Guardian

The ever-present security forces on Tashkurgan’s otherwise tranquil streets give it the feel of an Alpine resort crossed with the West Bank and public expressions of dissent are rare.

Asked how they felt about the town’s future, locals firmly stuck to the party line and said they were hopeful Xi’s project would inject new life into the area.

“We fully support the Belt and Road initiative,” beamed Narzi Baygim, a 23-year-old Tajik tour guide who said she hoped it would bring more tourists to the region. “I think it will help connect China to other countries and to promote friendship.”

Rebiya, a 22-year-old interpreter, said she was glad to have been born and raised in such a scenic and pristine corner of China. “Living here is like living in heaven,” she said.

But development was welcome, she said, shrugging off the suggestion that Tajik traditions might be diluted by the influx of outsiders.

“[Our culture] has been passed down over the past 2,000 years and has become part of our DNA,” she said. “I don’t think it will vanish just because of economic development.”

While business people are banking on the transformation of the region around Tashkurgan, not everyone is convinced the reality will live up to Xi’s grand vision. Some point out that since the Belt and Road initiative began in 2013 trade between Xinjiang and foreign countries has actually fallen.

Rahber Khan, the owner of a Pakistani restaurant near the town’s main square, said he feared most Chinese investment was destined for the strategic port of Gwadar, not the impoverished region where his family lived.

“Maybe in the future we are growing but right now we don’t see anything good in front of us,” said Khan, 39, who is originally from Ghulkin, a village just over the border.

“I’m not sure if it’s coming or not,” he said of plans to connect Pakistan and China with the Khunjerab railway, adding: “It’s just talking.”

Before this weekend’s summit in Beijing, China has trumpeted its commitment to the “game-changing” initiative in a barrage of state-sponsored propaganda.

“At a time when certain western powers are retreating into protectionism and isolation, China has been promoting the globalisation of the economy in a spirit of openness and inclusiveness,” the official news agency Xinhua declared.

The English-language China Daily newspaper described the drive as “one of the most important public goods China offers the world”.

Outside Khan’s restaurant, the Communist party has also set out its stall, stamping its message onto a giant red billboard that towers over Tashkurgan’s main square.

“Build a beautiful Xinjiang!” the sign reads. “Make a Chinese dream come true!”

Additional reporting by Wang Zhen

https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/may/12/chinese-president-belt-and-road-initiative
This sour grapes kind of article by the (in)famous British mainstream, The Guardian, instead generated my curiosity to learn more about the Tashkurgan (aka. Taxkorgan or Tashkurghan) 塔什库尔干, the principal town and seat of Tashkurgan Tajik Autonomous County, situated in the southwestern part of Xinjiang Uyghur Autonomous Region, China. No wonder that its population is mostly of Tajik ethnicity. The small and remote town is located near to the borders of Pakistan, Afghanistan, Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan. Tashkurgan is probably the most isolated area in China, there is only one road, that is The Karakoram Road or the National Highway G314 to reach this town.

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Tashkurgan means "Stone Fortress" or "Stone Tower" in the local language. Historical Chinese name for the town was a literal translation (Chinese: 石头城). The official spelling is Taxkorgan. Historically, the town was also called Sarikol or Sariqol. This region is commonly known as the main road of the "old Silk Road", the main route leading from China to West Asia. The average elevation is 4,000 meters.

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Tashkurgan Town 塔什库尔干镇 is situated in the southwesternmost of Xinjiang Province, China.
The Kalakuli or Karakul Lake is the famous lake in Tashkurgan,

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Tashkurgan, Xinjiang, China

Tashkurgan has a long history as a stop on the Silk Road. Major caravan routes converged here leading to Kashgar in the north, Yecheng to the east, Badakhshan and Wakhan to the west, and Chitral and Hunza to the southwest (modern Gilgit-Baltistan, Pakistan).

About 2,000 years ago, during the Han Dynasty, Tashkurgan was the main centre of the Kingdom of Puli (蒲犁), mentioned in the Book of Han and the Book of the Later Han. Later it became known as Varshadeh. Mentions in the Weilüe of the Kingdom of Manli (滿犁) probably also refer to Tashkurgan.

Many centuries later Tashkurgan became the capital of the Sarikol kingdom (色勒库尔), a kingdom of the Pamir Mountains, and later of Qiepantuo (朅盘陀) under the Persian Empire. At the northeast corner of the town is a huge fortress known as the Princess Castle dating from the Yuan Dynasty (1279–1368 CE) and the subject of many colourful local legends. A ruined fire temple is near the fortress. The Buddhist monk Xuanzang passed through Tashkurgan around 649 CE, on his way to Khotan from Badakhshan, as did Song Yun around 500 CE.

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Tashkurgan Grassland - During your walk on the grassland, you will encounter local Tajik people, herds of grazing animals, and you may visit their traditional yurt houses. You will have the opportunity to take photos of traditional life on the Pamir Plateau and of the beautiful scenery of the surrounding Pamir Mountains. There is also Karakul (Kalakuli) Lake, a nice lake, but has very few yurts or herdsmen during off season.

More info and beautiful pictures here: "Tashkurgan, Where Heaven Meets Earth"

Travel Tashkorgan - Beautiful Roof of Xinjiang | Episode 2 (Eng)
(Episode 1 is not available)
 
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Summit beginning in Beijing on Sunday is looking like a proper international forum, with major late additions


PUBLISHED : Friday, 12 May, 2017, 11:56pm
UPDATED : Saturday, 13 May, 2017, 3:08am

The belt and road summit beginning on Sunday in Beijing will now look like a proper international gathering, with Washington, Seoul and Tokyo agreeing to send delegations.

The US delegation will be headed by Matthew Pottinger, special assistant to President Donald Trump and the National Security Council senior director for East Asia.

The presence of the US delegation would mark the end of a boycott by Washington of China’s “Belt and Road Initiative”, and would be “a good start for Beijing and Washington to build bilateral trust”, said Yuan Zheng from the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences.

As for South Korea, Beijing did not initially invite it due to its unhappiness with Seoul’s decision to deploy a US anti-missile system. But Beijing extended an olive branch after President Xi Jinping spoke to new South Korean President Moon Jae-in to congratulate him on his appointment.

China and US to open their markets further, easing fears of trade war

During the discussion, Xi said South Korea and China should respect each other’s concerns and handle disputes appropriately, while Moon said he planned to send a delegation to Beijing to discuss the missile shield, the Terminal High-Altitude Area Defence system, which Beijing sees as a threat to its security.

A delegation led by lawmaker Park Byeong-seug from the South’s ruling Democratic Party would attend the forum tomorrow and on Monday, according to presidential press secretary Yoon Young-chan.

The five main projects of the Belt and Road Initiative

For Japan, Liberal Democratic Party Secretary General Toshihiro Nikai will attend a high-level conference during the forum.

During his visit, Nikai was expected to hand over a personal letter from Japanese Prime Minister Shinzo Abe to Xi, according to the Japan News.

On Tuesday, Beijing confirmed that a North Korean delegation would also attend. Beijing did not give details, but Yonhap said it would be led by Kim Yong-jae, the minister of external economic relations.

A South Korean official told Yonhap that the possibility of a dialogue between the two Korean delegations could not be ruled out.

Additional reporting by Kristin Huang

http://www.scmp.com/news/china/poli...an-and-koreas-make-belt-and-road-forum-global
 
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As I said in my previous comments on other thread, It's in US interest to join OBOR to expand their business across Eurasia continent since US has a good business and manufacturing plants in China such as Apple and other brand and China is HUB for over 3 billions people throughout the land connectivity , Americans will hold a competitive edge over Japan and other competitors and share a portion of cake. Japan and Korea sure know the important of OBOR China, if China will to share the connectivity and let them to have a portion of cake, they will be gladly to take part of this mega-project as AIIB.
 
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"The belt and road summit beginning on Sunday in Beijing will now look like a proper international gathering, with Washington, Seoul and Tokyo agreeing to send delegations."

Wow as if without us, sk, japan, the BRF is not a proper international gathering? wtf...
 
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The project is more like a contractor china connecting, building and developing third world countries. I doubt west will agree on Chinese domination, they have their own plans to constrain china.
 
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"The belt and road summit beginning on Sunday in Beijing will now look like a proper international gathering, with Washington, Seoul and Tokyo agreeing to send delegations."
Wow as if without us, sk, japan, the BRF is not a proper international gathering? wtf...
With the participation of US, SK, Japan, with total GDP of US$20+ Trillions, I would not call that insignificant. Just like any gathering without China will not be so internationally "proper".
The more the merrier and the more isolated India's absence will be.
 
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