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Pakistani Army Chief Visits Beijing After 'Silk Road' Tension


Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi (file photo)
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi (file photo)

ISLAMABAD (Reuters) -- Pakistan's army chief, General Qamar Javed Bajwa, began a three-day visit to China on September 16, Pakistan's military announced, days after a Pakistani minister stirred unease about Chinese Silk Road projects in the South Asian nation.

Bajwa is the most senior Pakistani figure to visit staunch ally China since the new government of Prime Minister Imran Khan took office in August, and his trip comes a week after China's top diplomat visited Islamabad.

Pakistan has deepened ties with China in recent years as relations with the United States have frayed.

Bajwa may be hoping in Beijing to smooth out any Chinese alarm at comments last week by Pakistan's commerce minister, Abdul Razak Dawood, who suggested suspending for a year projects related to the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC), the Pakistani leg of China's Belt and Road Initiative that includes recreating the old Silk Road trading route.

Bajwa, the chief of army staff (COAS), regularly holds meetings with world leaders due to the Pakistan armed forces' outsize influence in the nuclear-armed nation, where the military controls security and dictates major foreign policy decisions.

"During the visit COAS will interact with various Chinese leaders including his counterpart," military spokesman Major General Asif Ghafoor tweeted on September 16.

Beijing has pledged to invest about $60 billion in Pakistan for infrastructure for the Belt and Road project.

Dawood, in an interview with the Financial Times, also suggested the CPEC contracts had been unfairly negotiated by the previous government and were too favorable for the Chinese. Later he said the comments were taken out of context but did not dispute their veracity.

The critical comments were published soon after China's top diplomat, State Councillor and Foreign Minister Wang Yi, visited Pakistan and the two sides reaffirmed the mutual benefits of the Beijing-funded projects.

On September 13, Pakistan's government said it wanted CPEC to include more projects with a focus on socioeconomic development, something that would align more with the populist agenda of Khan's new administration.

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