Pakistan seeks ASEAN-level trade access from China under flagship CPEC project

Pakistan seeks ASEAN-level trade access from China under flagship CPEC project
Screengrab taken from a video shared by Pakistan's Ministry of Planning and Development on September 26, 2025, showing Pakistan's Minister for Planning and Development Ahsan Iqbal (right) addressing the 14th Joint Coordination Committee on CPEC in Beijing, China. (@PlanComPakistan/X)
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Updated 26 September 2025
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Pakistan seeks ASEAN-level trade access from China under flagship CPEC project

Pakistan seeks ASEAN-level trade access from China under flagship CPEC project
  • Islamabad calls for export-driven partnership and B2B investment as $62 billion corridor enters new stage
  • Islamabad also unveils plans for $8.5 billion in new deals, industrial relocation and 60% clean energy by 2030

ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s planning minister Ahsan Iqbal on Friday urged China to grant Islamabad the same market access enjoyed by Southeast Asian nations, as he called for an export-driven expansion of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC).

Iqbal was speaking at the 14th session in Beijing of the Joint Coordination Committee (JCC), the top decision-making body steering the CPEC program. Launched in 2015 as part of China’s Belt and Road Initiative, CPEC is a network of infrastructure, energy and industrial projects worth around $62 billion. 

The first phase of CPEC focused on tackling Pakistan’s crippling energy shortages and improving connectivity through new power plants, highways and the development of the deep-sea port of Gwadar. The second phase is expected to shift the focus to industrial cooperation, agriculture, technology and human capital development.

CPEC projects have stalled in recent years due to persistent security threats to Chinese workers and bureaucratic delays, and Islamabad is now seeking to revive momentum under the program's second phase.

“Despite China’s $2 trillion import annually, Pakistan’s exports to China demand barely $3 billion,” Iqbal said. “We seek under CPEC that Pakistan may be given the same market access as ASEAN countries so that we have the same tariff for Pakistani products.”

Such a concession would mean giving Pakistani goods the same preferential tariff treatment that China extends to members of the Association of Southeast Asian Nations under their free trade agreement, which has eliminated or sharply reduced tariffs on more than 90 percent of products traded between them. Islamabad argues that similar terms would help narrow its trade gap with China and significantly boost exports from its textile, agricultural and engineering sectors.

Iqbal said CPEC should now pivot “from government-to-government to business-to-business cooperation” to unlock Pakistan’s export potential, adding that a recent Pakistan-China Investment Conference saw 800 companies sign memoranda of understanding worth $8.5 billion, underscoring the appetite for private-sector partnerships.

Iqbal also proposed two government-to-government special economic zones in Karachi and Islamabad, alongside a Pakistan-China industrial relocation fund to attract investment in textiles, engineering, electronics, pharmaceuticals and electric vehicles. Chinese industries should be encouraged to move production to Pakistan to benefit from lower costs, he said.

Iqbal also called for a “Pakistan-China Digital Silk Road” with investment in 5G networks, fiber optics and data centres, and the creation of joint laboratories in artificial intelligence and quantum computing. 

A “future skills program” in IT, robotics, fintech and biotech, as well as a space centre in Pakistan, would prepare the country’s youth for a technology-driven economy, he added.

On climate and sustainability, Iqbal proposed a joint working group on water and climate resilience and expanded cooperation on renewable energy to help Pakistan reach 60 percent clean energy by 2030. Pilot projects in climate-smart agriculture and electric mobility should also be launched, he said.

Other priorities include modernizing agriculture with hybrid seeds, drip irrigation and agro-processing zones, building cold-chain logistics and storage facilities to reduce post-harvest losses, expanding cross-border fiber-optic networks and border markets, and constructing new transport links, including a mining corridor connecting mineral-rich regions to the southwestern Gwadar port that China is developing under CPEC.

Reaffirming Pakistan’s commitment to the safety of Chinese personnel and projects, Iqbal said: 

“Peace and stability remain the bedrock of our partnership, and Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif is personally committed to overseeing the security of Chinese personnel.”

“With youth as innovators, people as stakeholders, and exports as the driver of growth, CPEC will help transform Pakistan’s economy and realize our shared dream of connectivity, prosperity, and a community of shared future for mankind,” he added.


Government hopes to table 27th constitutional amendment in parliament next week

Government hopes to table 27th constitutional amendment in parliament next week
Updated 06 November 2025
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Government hopes to table 27th constitutional amendment in parliament next week

Government hopes to table 27th constitutional amendment in parliament next week
  • Amendment proposes Constitutional Court, changes to armed forces clause and judicial powers
  • Khawaja Asif says the government will carry out the entire process through mutual consultation

ISLAMABAD: A senior Pakistani minister said on Wednesday the 27th constitutional amendment was expected to be tabled in parliament next week, confirming its broad contours, including changes to an article dealing with the armed forces, while saying the government was trying to build a consensus.

The proposed amendment seeks to introduce sweeping structural changes to Pakistan’s governance and constitutional framework.

According to details shared by top politicians, including Pakistan People’s Party (PPP) Chairman Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari, it aims to establish a new Constitutional Court, restore the powers of executive magistrates, alter judicial transfer procedures, revise the military command clause (Article 243), and potentially adjust provincial revenue shares under the National Finance Commission (NFC) Award — a key mechanism governing fiscal relations between the federation and provinces.

“This entire process will be carried out through mutual consultation,” Defense Minister Khawaja Asif told Geo News in an interview, adding that the government expected clarity on the consensus within the next two or three days, with the 27th Amendment likely to be presented to parliament next week.

“Consultations on amending Article 243 are ongoing […] defense requirements have changed,” he said, referring to the constitutional provision that states the federal government shall have command and control of the armed forces, with the supreme command vested in the president.

Asif said the Pakistan Muslim League-Nawaz (PML-N) government, now attempting to amend the Constitution for the second time in its tenure, was holding discussions with all major political parties on the proposed reform package.

He declined to comment further on the possible wording of the amendment until the draft was finalized.

The minister also confirmed the amendment proposals included creating a separate Constitutional Court with representation from all provinces to handle constitutional cases, which he noted make up a small but complex share of the judiciary’s workload.

He said the government was also considering changes to the procedure for judges’ transfers and the mechanism for resolving deadlocks over the appointment of the Chief Election Commissioner.

Asif additionally warned of constitutional complications arising from delays in Senate elections in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, saying discussions were underway to ensure senators complete their terms in line with constitutional provisions.