
China's belt and road Initiative: A trillion-dollar trap
The Belt and Road isn't a single highway, it's a tangled web of influence stretching across continents. With over 140 countries involved and more than $1.17 trillion committed by 2024, the scale is jaw-dropping. Projects range from Kenyan railways to European ports, from African power grids to digital silk roads. Beijing's banks bankroll it all, mostly through state loans that come with more strings than steel.advertisementOver $634 billion has gone into construction contracts and $419 billion into non-financial investments. These aren't charity projects, they're loans, often at commercial rates, with sovereign guarantees. When countries default, Beijing doesn't write off debt; it renegotiates, sometimes demanding control of key infrastructure.The Sri Lankan WarningSri Lanka exemplifies what happens when countries can't repay China. It borrowed heavily from Beijing to build Hambantota Port, a white elephant in the middle of nowhere. When Colombo couldn't service its debt, China didn't forgive it. It took the port for 99 years. That's not investment, it's strategic colonization, sitting just a few hundred miles off India's southern coast.Pakistan, China's supposed "iron brother," looks more like a financially dependent client state. The China-Pakistan Economic Corridor represents a $60+ billion venture cutting through disputed Indian territory. India calls it illegal; China shrugs. Meanwhile, Pakistan's debt balloons, blackouts continue, and insurgents target Chinese engineers.Growing Opposition and Hidden CostsWhat began as soft power is turning into hard liability. The annual burn rate of BRI investments outpaced even U.S. foreign commitments in its early years, but the return on investment remains disappointing. Chinese firms operate in risky environments, chasing influence over profits while defaults rise.BRI has sparked protests in Kenya, corruption trials in Malaysia, and unrest in Pakistan. Locals complain of Chinese labor replacing local workers, environmental disasters, and overpriced projects. In Europe, Italy called its BRI membership an "atrocious mistake."India's Strategic ForesightFrom Day One, India opposed the BRI's flagship project, viewing the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor as territorial violation rather than investment. India rightly called BRI opaque, exploitative, and neo-colonial. While neighbors queued up for Chinese money, India chose sovereignty over checkbooks—a decision that now looks like strategic foresight rather than stubborn nationalism.India sees China's ports in Gwadar, Hambantota, Chittagong, and Kyaukpyu not as infrastructure but as strategic bases, links in a noose surrounding Indian territory. Each port represents a potential outpost for Chinese naval expansion in Beijing's maritime monopoly game.The Human and Environmental CostBeyond numbers and ports lie real people. Chinese labor dominates projects while local workers are sidelined. Reports of forced labor, passport confiscation, and wage theft are well-documented. BRI often ignores environmental impact assessments, dams flood ecosystems, railways slice through forests, and ports displace villages.The "Digital Silk Road" exports Chinese surveillance technology to partner nations, with countries getting connectivity while Beijing gains access to sensitive data. The African Union discovered their Beijing-built headquarters was secretly sending data back to China nightly.advertisementA Failing GambleInside China, BRI has become a political hot potato. Projects abroad are flailing while domestic voices question spending billions abroad as unemployment rises at home. With global opposition mounting and domestic returns fading, Beijing may soon face scaling back its most ambitious foreign policy gamble.India's refusal to compromise sovereignty for short-term investment helped it avoid the traps that ensnared others. By investing in regional partnerships and multilateral forums like the India-Middle East-Europe Corridor, India offers transparency, trust, and technology, not just money.China's Belt and Road Initiative promised global connectivity but has delivered debt, dependency, and disillusionment for many participants. The monetary cost is staggering, but the political cost—lost sovereignty, broken alliances, and compromised futures, is worse. For India, staying out looks smarter with every passing year. The world must ultimately decide: Is infrastructure worth the influence it surrenders?- EndsMust Watch
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News18
22 minutes ago
- News18
Protests erupt across PoGB as police, lawyers, and locals voice grievances
Gilgit [PoGB], August 14 (ANI): Numerous protests were held in various areas of the Pakistan-occupied Gilgit-Baltistan (PoGB) region on Wednesday, the Dawn sit-in conducted by the PoGB police outside the Chief Minister's House has now reached its third day. The police are demonstrating to urge the authorities to raise their allowance in line with the budget for 2025-26. Officers from other districts, including those assigned to protect Chinese nationals in Chilas, also joined the sit-in in the daily allowance for PoGB police was raised from PKR 440 to PKR 880 in the budget, a notification has yet to be issued. The protesting officers claim they have been fighting for their rights for months, noting that a protest outside the Chief Minister's Secretariat was previously called off two weeks ago after the government guaranteed that their concerns would be addressed within 14 days, according to the Dawn Monday, PoGB police initiated departmental proceedings against personnel accused of 'misconduct".An official order states that 63 officials are being dismissed from service in the initial phase. These actions were reportedly decided during a disciplinary committee the same time, various legal associations in PoGB organised a protest and boycotted court proceedings in Gilgit, Skardu, Ghizer, and several other districts. Lawyers have been advocating for their rights for the past ten months.A joint meeting involving the Gilgit-Baltistan Bar Council, the Supreme Court Bar Association GB, the High Court Bar Association GB, and the District Bar Association Gilgit was held, according to a statement by meeting reached a unanimous agreement that PoGB lawyers would stage a strike and refrain from appearing in any courts across the region until their demands are addressed. One significant demand from the lawyers is the appointment of judges to the vacant seats in the GB Supreme Appellate meeting expressed dissatisfaction with the government's inability to fulfil the lawyers' demands following multiple strikes and protests. The lawyers referred to the lack of action as 'a conspiracy against the people of PoGB", as reported by key demand from the lawyers involves extending the Lawyers Protection Act to PoGB by the federal government, which they argue is crucial for safeguarding their safety and professional lawyers requested the advertisement of available civil judge positions and insisted that judicial magistrate roles be distinct from civil judge roles, consistent with practices in other regions of the country, with appointments being made from the legal profession based on merit, as highlighted by the Dawn have pointed out that the PoGB Supreme Appellate Court has been functioning with just one judge for the past seven years. According to regulations, a single judge cannot handle all cases, leading to thousands of essential cases remaining addition, protests regarding power shortages took place in Sikandarabad and Nagar, where demonstrators obstructed the Diamer section of the KKH. Similar demonstrations were also organised in Nagar Khas and other regions, as cited by the Dawn report. (ANI)


Time of India
26 minutes ago
- Time of India
‘Time has come': Ex-Niti Aayog VC Rajiv Kumar urges lifting curbs on Chinese investments; flags US tariff impact
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India Today
26 minutes ago
- India Today
Pakistan to create Army Rocket Force after Op Sindoor setback
Pakistan, which was made to bite the dust by Indian armed forces in Operation Sindoor, has announced the creation of a new military force to supervise missile combat capabilities in a conventional conflict. Pakistan's move on a dedicated command for missiles and rockets, modelled on China's People's Liberation Army Rocket Force (PLARF), is being seen as an apparent move to match India's the four-day mini-war in May, aerial warfare prevailed. Drones, missiles, and loitering munitions were all used by both sides. Pakistan's Chinese-made PL-15 and India's indigenous BrahMos, Akash systems, and even the Russian S-400 were deployed. Pakistan's missiles largely turned into duds, as almost all were intercepted and destroyed by Indian air defence using several missile Prime Minister, Shehbaz Sharif, on the eve of its Independence Day, late Wednesday (August 13, 2025), announced the creation of the Army Rocket Force at a ceremony held in Islamabad to commemorate the military confrontation with India, reported news agency Reuters. "It will be equipped with modern technology," Sharif said, according to a statement from Islamabad. He added that the force will prove to be a milestone in strengthening the combat capability of Pakistan's however, did not provide any further NEW MISSILE COMMAND, MODELLED AFTER CHINA'S IS 'MEANT FOR INDIA'A senior Pakistani security official told news agency Reuters that the new force will house a dedicated command, which will be exclusive to the handling and deployment of missiles in any event of a conventional war."It is obvious that it is meant for India," he Army Rocket Force Command (ARFC) will be "modelled explicitly after China's People's Liberation Army Rocket Force (PLARF)", noted Group Captain MJ Augustine (retired) in his report in the Eurasian PLARF, previously known as the Second Artillery Corps, serves as China's strategic and tactical missile force. As the fourth branch of the People's Liberation Army (PLA), the PLARF manages China's land-based missile arsenal, including ballistic, hypersonic, and cruise missiles, both nuclear and Captain MJ Augustine (retired) explained how Pakistan's new force being modelled after the one in China, also strengthens the Islamabad-Beijing axis. During Operation Sindoor, China provided Pakistan with real-time intelligence, satellite surveillance, and advanced military hardware. This collaboration, including the use of Chinese-supplied J-10 aircraft and AI-driven systems like CENTAIC, revealed the deep strategic nexus, with China using Pakistan as a testing ground for its military the regional level, the ARFC reinforces the China-Pakistan alliance, often referred to as an "all-weather friendship". Modelled after China's PLARF, which oversees the country's extensive missile arsenal for both conventional and nuclear purposes, Pakistan's force gains from Chinese technology transfers, according to the INDIA HAD AN EDGE OVER PAKISTAN IN OPERATION SINDOORDuring Operation Sindoor, India demonstrated a decisive advantage over Pakistan in both missile interception and offensive air defence systems proved highly effective in neutralising incoming threats, intercepting Pakistani missiles with precision and minimising potential damage. A night before the ceasefire, India intercepted and shot down Pakistan's Fatah-1 missile over Haryana's Sirsa. Its debris were found near Khaja Khera the same time, the Indian Air Force launched a fierce and coordinated assault, striking multiple high-value and sensitive targets deep within Pakistani territory. These included PAF's Nur Khan airbase, key communication hubs, and strategic infrastructure, disrupting Pakistan's operational combination of technological superiority, advanced missile defence systems, and aggressive aerial tactics left Pakistan struggling to mount an effective by this, Pakistan has seemingly responded by creating its new military unit – the Army Rocket Force.- Ends advertisement