Islamabad - Reports by The Guardian and some media outlets about protests against the China-proposed Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) in Gwadar, Pakistan, are untrue, and behind the fake news are some foreign media organizations’ deliberate smears of China-Pakistan cooperation, an investigation by the Global Times has found.
Refuting a Friday report by The Guardian, Gwadar authorities said in a statement sent to the Global Times on Wednesday that the report is “full of misleading, malicious and misrepresented information.”
The statement, which was issued by the Chief of the Municipal Committee of Gwadar, said that shortages of water and electricity in Gwadar “are not the responsibility of the Chinese at all,” instead, they are due to historical reasons and still a problem for Gwadar. In The Guardian’s report about protests against water and electricity shortages in Gwadar, where a flagship project of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) is located, the newspaper said local people blamed China for the problem and the protests were “part of a growing backlash” against the BRI in Pakistan.
On Sunday, another report -- this time by ANI -- said that the protests were staged against “illegal fishing by Chinese trawlers.”
China Overseas Ports Holding Co (COPHC) Pakistan, the enterprise that operates the Gwadar Port, also refuted reports of the protests against Chinese trawlers in a reply to the Global Times on Thursday, saying the reports are “not true.”
Tahir Murtaza, a Pakistani reporter who has been following the situation in Gwadar, told the Global Times that the protests have been going on for a long time. The issues are about the lack of electricity and water but China is not related. However, some media outlets deliberately linked those protests with fishing by Chinese trawlers.
Gwadar’s electricity supply is not connected with the Pakistani electricity grid and relies on electricity imported from Iran, which has also faced a supply shortage recently, Murtaza said. “Pakistan has talked with Iran about providing extra energy to meet local demand but local people are demanding an uninterrupted supply of electricity. The same is the case with water,” he said, noting that “China is not the reason for the lack of electricity and water” there. According to the statement by the Municipal Committee of Gwadar, Chinese companies have managed to supply 100,000 to 200,000 gallons of water to the local community with their own water plant.
The Guardian said that the protests are part of local people’s increasing “discontent with China’s presence in Gwadar,” and the newspaper even alleged the deadly attack on a bus carrying Chinese engineers and workers that killed nine Chinese nationals in July as a sign of Pakistani’s growing resentment against the BRI. The Municipal Committee of Gwadar refuted the claims, saying that the people of Gwadar are “grateful for the assistance provided by the Chinese government and companies,” and China’s projects have boosted employment for the local community and would improve the infrastructure in the city.