Pak-China discuss rail line to connect PoK with Xinjiang
Pakistan and China have started discussion on building a cross-border railway linking northern areas of Pakistan-occupied-Kashmir (PoK) with Kashgar, an old Chinese Silk road town in the restive northwestern Xinjiang province.
Masood Khan, Pakistan's Ambassador to China, said that a feasibility study of the railway had been conducted but there was still no time-table for starting the construction.
"By using this option, you can shorten China's trading routes from the Gulf to Shanghai by about 5,000 miles. It is very short," Pakistan state-run APP news agency quoted Khan as telling the Chinese media.
He said talks about a cross border pipeline that can carry oil and gas to China via inland Eurasia have also begun. Pakistan President Asif Ali Zardari, who concluded his three-day visit to the troubled Chinese province last week, said the region plays a strategic role in firming up the relationship between China and Pakistan.
China has blamed militants of the East Turkistan Islamic Movement (ETIM) trained in Pakistan based terror camps for creating unrest in Muslim Uygur majority in Xinjiang. Pakistan's Information Minister Firdous Ashiq Awan, who is here on an official visit, underlined the need to change strategy to counter ETIM militants.
"They (terrorists outfits) keep on changing their strategies and actions. So we must work in close collaboration and also change our actions, and that can only be done through close coordination and mutual understanding," Awan told the Chinese media.
With better coordinated efforts, we can curtail terrorism, she said, condemning the recent attacks by the banned ETIM militants in Kashgar, close to PoK. China is already helping Pakistan and has always supported its efforts to eliminate the menace, she was quoted as saying by APP.
Pakistan Information Minister underlined that Pakistan is committed to fight terrorism and has always supported steps to ensure peace and stability in the region.
Awan said China and Pakistan are working in close coordination for peace in the region and both the countries have mechanism in place for intelligence sharing to stamp out scourge of terrorism and extremism. Awan said APP was planning to formulate specific segment of news sharing in Chinese language.
She said Pakistan was in ‘talks to give landing rights’ to Chinese state-run TV channel CCTV as given to international electronic media outlets. The minister said that we are also examining how the Chinese language programmes in Pakistan vis-a-vis Pakistani programmes, including drama, documentaries, arts and culture and youth programmes can be telecast in each other countries.
"We want deep interaction between Radio Pakistan and China Radio International (CRI)," she noted.
"Most importantly, we are seeking the help of Chinese government in establishing Media University where we can impart trainings to media professionals in various fields as this would help better orientations for them," Awan said.
Post new comment