Pakistan has secured China's help to build two new nuclear-power
reactors in a deal being touted as a counterweight to rival India's
recently concluded nuclear pact with the U.S.
But
in his first official visit to Beijing last week, new Pakistan
President Asif Ali Zardari apparently failed to nail down a firm
Chinese commitment for another urgent need -- money to help replenish
the country's sharply dwindling foreign reserves. With reserves at a
six-year low, a Pakistani finance official said Saturday that Islamabad
might seek assistance from the International Monetary Fund "as a last
resort" to shore them up if it can't raise enough funds from other
sources.
The nuclear deal with China would give Pakistan an additional 680
megawatts of power a year, or just over a quarter of the country's
estimated current electricity shortfall.
China's leaders "do recognize Pakistan's need" for more energy,
Foreign Minister Shah Mahmood Qureshi told reporters in Islamabad on
Saturday.
But more importantly, Mr. Qureshi suggested, the deal would help
restore the balance of power in South Asia following a much more
comprehensive nuclear pact between India and the U.S., which gives New
Delhi access to international atomic fuel and technology markets. In
exchange, India has agreed to open its civilian reactors -- but not its
military nuclear program -- to international inspections.
"China is one country that at international forums has clearly
spoken against the discriminatory nature of that understanding" between
Washington and New Delhi, Mr. Qureshi said, according to the Associated
Press.
With ties between Washington and Islamabad strained over the
faltering battle against Islamic militants along Pakistan's border with
Afghanistan, Pakistan is increasingly turning to its long-time ally
China for everything from help with propping up its teetering economy
to boosting its woefully inadequate energy supplies.
Critics of the India-U.S. nuclear deal have argued that it could
spark an arms race in South Asia by freeing up India's relatively small
domestic atomic fuel supplies for use in the country's weapons program,
a charge New Delhi denies.
Pakistani officials have pushed for a similar nuclear arrangement
with the U.S. But Washington has repeatedly refused to discuss
nuclear-energy cooperation with Pakistan, pointing to Islamabad's past
record of clandestinely spreading atomic-weapons technology to
countries such as Libya, Iran and North Korea through a smuggling ring
run by scientist Abdul Qadeer Khan, the now-disgraced father of
Pakistan's nuclear-arms program.
While Mr. Qureshi offered few details of the latest China-Pakistan
nuclear deal, Chinese officials had previously said any agreement would
be for peaceful energy purposes and would be supervised by the
International Atomic Energy Agency, the United Nations' nuclear
watchdog. The two new reactors are being added to the Chinese-built
nuclear power plant in Chasma, a town in central Pakistan.
Despite the deep friendship, Mr. Zardari didn't appear to get an immediate pledge of help from China on the financial front.
Pakistan is seeking at least $5 billion to $6 billion from donors to
shore up its dwindling foreign-exchange reserves -- down to about $7.75
billion from nearly $16.4 billion almost a year ago -- and to revive
its ailing economy by boosting foreign investors' confidence.
Mr. Zardari is believed by diplomatic analysts to have asked China
for $1 billion to $2 billion in a loan to Pakistan's central bank.
Neither side has said whether any deal was struck, but Mr. Qureshi said
Saturday that China would attend a so-called Friends of Pakistan donor
conference next month in Abu Dhabi. He also said that China would
invest $1 billion in various projects until June and that various
Chinese organizations would invest in Pakistan's banking, mineral and
industrial sectors.
Shaukat Tareen, an adviser to the prime minister, said that the
country may seek the assistance of the International Monetary Fund if
it fails to get the funds it needs. "We need $3 billion in the next few
months, and efforts have been made to raise funds on time and we have
received ample commitment from multilateral donor agencies and
countries," Mr. Tareen said. "The next 30 to 45 days are crucial. ...
We will seek assistance from the IMF as last resort."
While Pakistani authorities put the financing gap at $3 billion, the
IMF believes it is $4 billion to $4.5 billion. Foreign-exchange
reserves slipped to a six-year low of $7.749 billion in the week ended
Oct. 11 as oil imports rose and the central bank sold dollars to
prevent a sharp slide in the Pakistani rupee.
Mr. Tareen said the World Bank and the Asian Development Bank had
agreed to give $1.5 billion each in the form of front-loaded
concessional financing, with the money expected by June 30. In
addition, the Islamic Development Bank and U.K.'s Department for
International Development had agreed to double their assistance to $1
billion and £600 million ($1.04 billion), respectively.
—Gordon Fairclough, C.R. Jayachandran and Neelabh Chaturvedi contributed to this article.