Pakistan eyes $30 bln help from "Friends" group
By Augustine Anthony
ISLAMABAD, April 3 (Reuters) - Pakistan will ask its allies to provide up to $30 billion in aid over the next 10 years at a conference in Japan this month, the country's top economic official said on Friday.
Nuclear-armed Pakistan, a vital ally of the United States as it struggles to bring stability to Afghanistan and defeat al Qaeda, got a $7.6 billion International Monetary Fund (IMF) loan in November to dodge a balance of payments crisis.
It is also seeking funds from friendly countries and other multilateral agencies and will make its case for substantial long-term help at a meeting of the "Friends of Pakistan" group in Tokyo on April 17.
"We are going to make projections worth $30 billion for long-term projects," Finance Ministry chief Shaukat Train told reporters.
"We are going to talk about what our economic vision is, what our economic needs are over the period of the next five to 10 years," he said.
Tarin did not elaborate but officials said earlier Pakistan would discuss financing requirements for long-term energy, infrastructure and skill development needs to put the economy on a sound footing.
The "Friends of Pakistan" groups more than a dozen countries including the United States and Saudi Arabia.
Members agreed in Abu Dhabi in November that coordinated international cooperation with Pakistan was needed to help in the face of financial and security crises. Continued...
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