A New Chapter Is Emerging in Pakistan-China Relations

Pakistan China Relationship

Prime Minister Muhammad Shehbaz Sharif meeting with the Prime Minister of the Peoples Republic of China Mr Li Qiang receiving at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on 25 May 2026
Prime Minister Muhammad Shehbaz Sharif meeting with the Prime Minister of the Peoples Republic of China Mr Li Qiang receiving at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing on 25 May 2026

PM Shehbaz with PM Li Qiang

Prime Minister Muhammad Shehbaz Sharif was presented guard of honour upon arrival at the Great Hall of the People with Prime Minister of the Peoples Republic of China Mr Li Qiang, Beijing, 25 May 2026
Prime Minister Muhammad Shehbaz Sharif was presented guard of honour upon arrival at the Great Hall of the People with Prime Minister of the Peoples Republic of China Mr Li Qiang, Beijing, 25 May 2026

ISLAMABAD, May 30, 2026 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) — The Ministry of Information and Broadcasting (MoIB) is responsible for promoting and managing the official narrative surrounding Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif’s visit to China, which celebrates the 75th anniversary of diplomatic relations.

For most of the last decade, Pakistan-China engagement was defined in terms of highways, energy infrastructure, ports, and the broader CPEC-based infrastructure projects, all of which revolutionized Pakistan’s economy, enhanced connectivity, and solved long-drawn energy crises. However, the Islamabad-Beijing partnership today is transcending into something much wider and a great deal more strategic.

This change was abundantly clear in the recent visit to China by the Prime Minister. The meeting with the Chinese Premier, Li Qiang, attendance at the Pakistan-China Third B2B Investment Forum and meetings with China’s tech giants were evident symbols of this shift in the Pakistan-China cooperation away from the traditional economic cooperation toward the newer dimensions like technology, innovation, industry and strategic cooperation.

The atmosphere of the visit itself was meaningful. Pakistan and China were not just looking at the volume of trade or individual deals. Instead, they were discussing a convergence in vision and future-focused industries and development plans in an era of fast-changing technological and political global economy.

The PM during his talks with Premier Li Qiang in Beijing, stated that the Pakistan-China All-Weather Strategic Cooperative Partnership would continue to remain the centerpiece of Pakistan’s foreign policy. The two sides expressed happiness with the gradual progress in the relationship and assured each other of support on each other’s core issues. Although this is a standard boilerplate statement made at diplomatic negotiations, however the context of the visit itself suggests that the two sides are moving ahead with the relationship to a new plane.

That transition is evident in CPEC too. It has been evolving from a focus mainly on large-scale infrastructure and connectivity to a model that encompasses industrialization, modernization of agriculture, digitization, clean energy, science, and high technology cooperation. This trend itself mirrors the realities of global developments. In today’s world, economic power and influence do not solely rely on locations or routes of trade but on technology, innovation and digital connectivity.

It seems that the Pakistani leadership has taken notice of that too. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif stressed the necessity of bringing China’s 15 th Five-Year Plan into sync with Pakistan’s “Uraan Pakistan” development agenda in order to speed up the practical cooperation and long-term economic coordination between the two countries. It has become clear that the discourse from Islamabad is that it is an aspiring participant in Asia’s technological and industrial future rather than restricted to traditional economic models.

An obvious manifestation of that increasing cooperation was evident during the Prime Minister’s visit to the headquarters of the Alibaba Group in Hangzhou. Pakistani delegation was given a warm welcome by Chairman Joe Tsai where both sides saw the signing of number of strategic MOUs between Alibaba Group and Pakistani public/private sector institutions. The areas of cooperation are mainly the digitalization process, technological enhancement and developing further cooperation in emerging sectors.

Yet the importance of the meeting extended beyond business alone. Joe Tsai acknowledged Pakistan’s efforts toward regional and global peace and stability while also appreciating the government’s focus on technological innovation and creating an environment attractive for international investment. Such remarks reflected growing Chinese confidence in Pakistan’s direction and broader regional role.

As such, Alibaba’s activity in Pakistan should be contextualised not simply as an isolated corporate venture, but as an extension of a broader pattern. Pakistani institutions and businesses are beginning to consider China not merely as the source of investment in physical infrastructure, but as a partner for enduring economic and technological development.

This macro-level transformation was in evidence during the entire visit. Repeated conversations revolved around digital transformation, science, connectivity, industrial growth and new technologies. The youth in Pakistan, with an increasing digital economy and growing tech sector, will increasingly become vital to its future ties with China.

The momentum was again deepened at the Pakistan-China Third B2B Investment Forum. Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif proudly proclaimed that 30 percent of the MOUs between the two nations had “already converted to formal agreements,” and that this was an unprecedented event. Most international investment forums are fraught with lofty declarations that never follow through. It seemed the priorities between Islamabad and Beijing remained constant: implementation, persistence, and results.

The symbolic aspect of the visit also counted. At the forum, Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif remarked that Pak-China friendship is “deeper than the oceans and higher than the Himalayas,” but with the launching of the space program, the friendship was now “touching the skies.” While at any other time, such comments could easily be dismissed as nothing more than rhetoric, given recent circumstances, they pointed towards a relationship that has now entered sectors that would eventually define the future global economy.

Collaboration in space appears as one of the most direct illustrations. PM Shehbaz Sharif spoke of Pakistani astronauts’ selection to the China space station program as a demonstration of growing trust and cooperation in the strategic, high-technology areas. Collaboration in space is not just of scientific and technological interest but of symbolically great value: it is a show of trust, long-term perspective and readiness to work on extremely strategic, hi tech areas.

The same is true of discourse on artificial intelligence and emerging technologies. No nation will freely allow cooperation in strategic technology fields without genuine political trust. It seems that Pakistan and China are moving into a phase where they appear not only economically aligned but in how they perceive long term regional stability and development.

Of course, security remains a key element. The assurances given by Prime Minister Shehbaz Sharif regarding the safety and security of Chinese nationals and projects in Pakistan were still relevant, as a sustained economic partnership depends on confidence, stability, and continuity on both sides.

More broadly, the significance of the visit highlights where Pakistan is headed. For so long, the international dialogue with Pakistan was one of just security or economic crises and political instability. While all these remain present and accounted for, another narrative has been unfolding simultaneously.

Slowly but surely, Pakistan is moving towards its place in a globalized world of technology, connectivity, and economic partnerships. China’s constant faith in Pakistan provides more than just investment to Islamabad; it lends a sense of strategic credibility in a world which is becoming more fractured and unstable geostrategically.

The Pakistan-China relationship is not only about roads, ports and power plants anymore. Roads, ports, and power plants were and still are the basic building blocks of the relationship but it is clear that the collaboration is expanding into fields such as Artificial Intelligence, Digital Trade, Industrial modernization, clean energy, science and space technology.

That transition may ultimately define the next chapter of Pakistan-China relations. The first phase focused on building physical connectivity across regions. The next phase appears focused on building technological, industrial, and strategic connectivity for the future.

Photos accompanying this announcement are available at

https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/60eb09f0-644c-4431-9994-42a8d520018a

https://www.globenewswire.com/NewsRoom/AttachmentNg/e6a16230-f821-4587-b375-c132f467ea9e 

CONTACT: Muhammad Subayyal
+923477195027

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