Naziha Syed Ali
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Gwadar now
finds itself as a launching pad for big regional, if not global, ambitions
based on the proposed Pak-China economic corridor.
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GWADAR:
The Pearl Continental Gwadar, located on the hammerhead that defines this
coastal town in southern Balochistan, is deserted on most days. Only a few of
the hotel’s 114 rooms are being kept operational; instead of central
air-conditioning, split ACs are in place; the shrubbery outside needs some
attention. Cost-cutting measures are clearly in place.
And
yet, the building is well lit and inviting, the smell of freshly polished
furniture lingers in the corridors, at least some of the rooms that are still
open are luxurious and well maintained, and the staff is eager to show you
around.
After a
cycle of boom and bust that has lasted nearly a decade, there’s an air of
expectation in Gwadar, a feeling that good times are just around the corner,
although that depends on whom you speak to.
This
small town of 85,000 people in Gwadar district was a sleepy little fishing
village until not so long ago. Now it finds itself as a launching pad for big
regional, if not global, ambitions based on the proposed Pak-China economic
corridor, a role reinforced by the prime minister’s high-powered visit here on
Thursday accompanied by the chief minister and army chief.
The
port is the centrepiece of the optimistic narrative. Its logo is a stylistic
depiction of a lighthouse and a windsurfer with the words “Symbol of
prosperity” underneath. In 2013, China Overseas Port Holding Company took over
operations at the facility from the Port of Singapore Authority after the
latter quit over a dispute regarding land to develop the port.
“Things
are moving very fast,” claimed Dostain Khan Jamaldini, chairman of the Gwadar Port
Authority. “Unlike Pakistanis, the Chinese spend a lot of time in planning,
then they do the execution quickly.”
Reinforcing
the impression of the feverish pace of activity, Director General Gwadar
Development Authority, Dr Sajjad H. Baloch said, “Several delegations of
Chinese have visited within the last six months; that last one was here just a
few days ago.”
Among
the projects in the ‘Gwadar package’ are port expansion, construction of a new
airport, an industrial estate, an export processing zone, desalination plant,
water and sewage system for the city and transportation infrastructure such as
a 19km expressway to link the port with the coastal highway, and other road and
rail links connecting Gwadar to upcountry via Ratodero in Sindh.
It was
recently announced that China would invest $1.8 billion in nine projects to
develop the port and the city. In a way, China is picking up where it left off,
for it had paid 75pc of the $248 million initial construction cost of the port.
The
facility became operational in 2008, but on a very limited scale. For now,
ships carrying subsidised wheat and urea from Canada and South Korea
occasionally dock at the port for transfer via the coastal highway to Karachi
and then elsewhere in the country. It’s an expensive exercise; direct
transportation links from Gwadar to upcountry are crucial to make the port
commercially viable.
And
there’s the rub. Baloch insurgents are violently opposed to the port project,
which they consider a means to further exploit Balochistan’s natural resources
and render the local population a minority by bringing in labour from
elsewhere.
Gwadar
city itself is considered free of insurgent activity – mainly because only one
road leads into this seaside locale, although it too has experienced its share
of insurgent activity and enforced disappearances in the past.
However,
step a little distance out on the M-8 that is to ultimately constitute one of
the two vital road links to Ratodero (and beyond to Kashgar in China – the
so-called ‘new Silk Road’) and the challenges begin to reveal themselves.
Every
so often along the highway, also built by the Chinese several years ago, there
are small lookout posts, which were manned by the Frontier Corps (FC) to
provide security to the construction teams from attacks by insurgents. Bridges
across en route river creeks, which flood in the rains, are unfinished. Work
was abandoned when the security situation in Balochistan deteriorated rapidly
after the killing of Nawab Bugti. Some Chinese contractors as well as labourers
and FC personnel suffered casualties in attacks by Baloch militants.
The
changing dynamics were reflected in Gwadar’s property market. A 1000 sq yard
plot in the coveted Singhar housing scheme atop the hammerhead went from
Rs50,000 in the ’90s to Rs5,500,000 in 2005 before plummeting to Rs300,000
where it languishes today. “Many made a fortune from real estate here,” said a
local. “But those who didn’t sell at the right time were ruined when the market
collapsed.”
Now
that the hype around the port is being built up again, it remains to be seen
whether investors will return, especially in view of the worsening insurgency
in much of the province.
There
have also been some unsettling incidents around Gwadar city recently. In March,
insurgents launched a well-planned attack on a radar post in Pasni, and in
Jiwani, some non-Baloch settlers have been targeted by the militants.
Nevertheless,
government officials and technocrats working on government projects insist the
challenge is not insurmountable. The Awaran section of the M-8 highway, for
example, has been dropped so as to skirt the volatile district. They also point
to instances even now of portions of the M-8 in insurgency-hit Khuzdar being
constructed under military supervision.
Speak
to locals in the rundown alleys of the town though and they shrug their
shoulders, pointing out that so far, the port has made no difference to their
lives. Abdul Hakeem, a fisherman, says, “All the change I’ve seen is that we’ve
been moved from where we were living for generations to make way for the port.”
A
50-bed hospital constructed four years ago has still not opened due to shortage
of medical personnel. Gwadar city uplift plans envisage its expansion to a
300-bed facility. “The functional district hospital is in a shambles. It lacks
basic medicines, and doesn’t have even a single dialysis machine,” says a
social activist. “Are we to believe that things are suddenly going to improve
for us?”
All
considered, there’s much work to be done if the ‘prosperity’ narrative is to be
one that takes everyone along.
http://www.dawn.com/news/1102499/gwadar-on-the-cusp-of-greatness