Expanding the high road
Beijing is pouring money and labour into improving the highway linking the Chinese Xinjiang region to Pakistan's Northern Areas and to the sea – even as events in the former have proved disquieting.
In late June, somewhere between Gilgit and the Hunza Valley, a Chinese worker gestured a code to signal clearance after blowing a final whistle to keep onlookers as far as possible from a huge stone in middle of a road. Seconds later, a massive explosion sent a thick column of smoke and dust into the sky, soon joined by a second rumble as the echo rebounded off a mountain across the low-lying Indus River. As the dust began to settle, two loaders and an excavator were quickly put into high gear, to begin removing the debris. Before restarting their work, a few of the Chinese workers moved away from the blast site and took cigarettes out of their pockets, to sit on roadside rocks. Eventually, they turned their attention back to the job at hand: improving the Karakoram Highway, the only land link between China and Pakistan.