Nong Rong named new Chinese envoy to Pakistan

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BEIJING: China has named Nong Rong as a new ambassador to replace outgoing Chinese Ambassador to Pakistan Yao Jing.He will be taking charge “in due course”, Chinese Foreign Ministry Spokesperson Zhao Lijian confirmed on Friday.

“As far as I understand, Nong Rong is now appointed as the new Chinese ambassador to Pakistan. He will be taking office in due course,” Zhao said in response to a question in this regard during his weekly media briefing .According to media reports, the newly nominated ambassador, Nong Rong, has expertise in trade and commerce. This will be his the first time he serves in Pakistan.
 
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China / Diplomacy
China appoints trade expert as new ambassador to Pakistan to help drive infrastructure development plan
  • Nong Rong has no experience as a diplomat but analyst says he is just the man to revitalise the multibillion-dollar China-Pakistan Economic Corridor
  • Former head of the ethnic and religious affairs commission in Guangxi can help ‘strengthen economic cooperation’, observer says
Kinling Lo

Kinling Lo

Published: 8:00pm, 13 Sep, 2020


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Nong Rong has been named as China’s new ambassador to Pakistan. Photo: Handout
Nong Rong has been named as China’s new ambassador to Pakistan. Photo: Handout

Nong Rong has been named as China’s new ambassador to Pakistan. Photo: Handout

China has appointed a trade specialist as its new ambassador to
Pakistan
in an apparent bid to breathe new life into its multibillion dollar infrastructure development partnership with its western neighbour.
Despite having no formal experience as a diplomat, Nong Rong – the Communist Party secretary of the ethnic and religious affairs commission in the Guangxi Zhuang autonomous region – was named by the foreign ministry on Friday as the man to replace incumbent Yao Jing.
“Although Nong is not trained as a diplomat, he has experience in economic diplomacy with Southeast Asian countries,” said Wang Dehua, a South Asia specialist at the Shanghai Municipal Centre for International Studies.
“The fact he headed the ethnic and religious affairs commission suggests he is capable of dealing with sensitive issues,” he said.

One of Nong’s primary roles will be to promote the
China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC)
, a US$62 billion dollar programme under Beijing’s
Belt and Road Initiative
.


Launched in 2013, the aim of the CPEC is to develop roads, railways, ports, pipelines and factories, as well as the largest airport in Pakistan. However, as of March, less than a third of the announced projects – with a combined value of just US$19 billion – had been completed, according to government figures.

Shakeel Ahmad Ramay, a political commentator based in Islamabad, said Nong’s experience in trade and commerce made him the ideal choice for the role of ambassador.
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“As the CPEC enters its second phase it will drive economic growth and China’s links to other countries,” he said.

“Nong’s experience will be useful in strengthening economic cooperation.”

Before taking over at the ethnic and religious affairs commission – under the regional office of the Communist Party’s United Front Work Department – Nong, 53 worked as a mayor and deputy party secretary of the city of Guigang in Guangxi.

Before that he spent six years at the trade and economic cooperation department, during which time he helped to organise a major expo held between China and the members of the
Association of Southeast Asian Nations
.
Beijing and Islamabad announced the launch of the CPEC’s second stage in April. According to its official website, the new phase will focus on “industrial cooperation, trade, agriculture and socio-economic development”.

Despite those ambitions, the programme has faced many obstacles, many of them linked to Pakistan’s debt problems and weak economy. In July last year, Islamabad turned to the International Monetary Fund for a US$6 billion bailout package.

Beijing has been frequently accused of driving developing nations into debt traps as a result of their partnerships on belt and road projects, an allegation it denies.
Another problem facing the CPEC is opposition from India, which has accused the scheme of trying to develop areas of Kashmir in which the South Asian neighbours have overlapping claims.

Beijing has consistently backed Islamabad on the issue of
Kashmir
, which also borders China’s Xinjiang and Tibet autonomous regions.
“The [Chinese] official being appointed to Pakistan will need to have sensitivity and understanding when it comes to ethnicity, religion and border affairs,” Wang said.
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This article appeared in the South China Morning Post print edition as: Trade specialist chosen as chief envoy to Pakistan
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Kinling Lo

Kinling Lo

Kinling Lo is a China reporter covering diplomacy and society news for the Post. She joined the team in 2016 as a cadet reporter.
Diplomacy
Pakistan
 
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