Saudi Arabia signs $20bn in deals with Pakistan

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
Image:Saudi Arabia 'is Pakistan's friend in need'Saudi Arabia has pledged investment deals worth $20bn (£15.5bn) with Pakistan which is
seeking to bolster its fragile economy
It comes as part of a high-profile Asian tour by the kingdom's Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman
Pakistan urgently needs to address a balance of payments crisis and is looking to international backers for support.The deals include an
$8bn oil refinery in the key port city of Gwadar.The two sides signed several other provisional agreements and memorandums of understanding
in the energy, petrochemicals and mining sectors, according to reports
"It's big for phase one, and definitely it will grow every month and every year, and it will be beneficial to both countries," the crown
prince said
Pakistan is desperate for cash
The south Asian country's central bank has only $8bn left in foreign reserves and faces a balance of payments crisis.Prime Minister Imran
Khan has been seeking help from friendly countries in order to cut the size of the bailout package his country is likely to need from the
International Monetary Fund, under very strict conditions
The country is seeking its 13th bailout since the late 1980s and Saudi Arabia has already provided a $6bn loan.Pakistan is the first stop on
an Asian tour by the crown prince, known as MBS
He is scheduled to be in India by Tuesday and will visit China on Thursday and Friday
The prince is seeking to recast his international image in the wake of the Jamal Khashoggi affair
The journalist was murdered at the Saudi consulate in Istanbul in October.Image caption Pakistan needs Saudi money to
stave off a huge IMF bail-out - but this is not a one-way relationship Against this backdrop, the current tour can be seen
as a charm offensive by MBS, who is seeking to bolster relationships with dependable allies as he doles out cash, says the
TheIndianSubcontinent's Abid Hussain.While Pakistan stands to benefit from Saudi Arabia's largesse, the south Asian country is also
important to the kingdom
The two countries have a long-standing military relationship and the MBS visit comes at a time when geopolitics in the region are shifting -
including concerns over the influence of Iran