China-Pakistan Knowledge Corridor: A New Chapter of People-to-People Bond

The proposal to build the China-Pakistan knowledge corridor, put forward by Pakistan’s Higher Education Commission (HEC), marks a significant upgrade in bilateral cooperation. It elevates long-standing pragmatic ties beyond infrastructure-focused economic collaboration toward people-centered cultural and educational integration.

BEIJING, July 10 (APP):The proposal to build the China-Pakistan knowledge corridor, put forward by Pakistan’s Higher Education Commission (HEC), marks a significant upgrade in bilateral cooperation. It elevates long-standing pragmatic ties beyond infrastructure-focused economic collaboration toward people-centered cultural and educational integration. This in-depth academic partnership responds to the booming social demand for cross-border learning and consolidates the foundational bond of the time-honored China-Pakistan all-weather strategic cooperative partnership.
This was stated by Prof Cheng Xizhong, Senior Research Fellow at the Charhar Institute, a non-governmental Chinese think-tank on diplomacy and international studies based in Beijing.
He said the explosive growth of Chinese language education across Pakistan has laid solid groundwork for this visionary initiative. As underscored by HEC Chairman Professor Dr. Niaz Ahmad Akhtar, Chinese is steadily displacing English as the most widely studied foreign language within Pakistan’s education landscape. Top Pakistani universities offer full-shift Chinese courses, yet local teaching resources remain insufficient to meet soaring demand, especially in remote and underdeveloped regions. This sweeping trend stems from the profound bilateral friendship and Pakistan’s sincere desire to deepen alignment with China’s development trajectory, reflecting its widespread recognition of China’s developmental achievements.
The cooperation between Beijing Language and Culture University (BLCU) and Pakistani educational institutions provides robust, systematic support for the development of the knowledge corridor. With six decades of experience cultivating global talents, BLCU has sustained long-standing, close ties with Pakistan. The Islamabad Confucius Institute, jointly established by the two parties in 2005 as the first of its kind in the Islamic world, has consistently been recognized as a global model and provided professional Chinese language training for China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC) projects. The five-point cooperation agenda proposed by BLCU covers youth exchange programs, discipline-specific talent training, Chinese-Urdu literary translation, localized Chinese teaching development, and the establishment of a national language resource center, transforming general cultural engagement into targeted, actionable cooperation, he added.
Fundamentally, the knowledge corridor serves as a vital complement to CPEC’s economic achievements. While CPEC advances tangible economic prosperity and infrastructure development, educational and linguistic exchanges bridge cultural divides and cultivate high-caliber bilingual professionals to underpin future bilateral cooperation.
Prof Cheng said the mechanisms such as joint and double-degree programs further enhance the quality and sustainability of academic collaboration. As the insightful adage goes, “When language connects, hearts draw near; when scholarship thrives, friendship endures.” Rooted in linguistic and academic connectivity, this initiative will deepen mutual understanding, consolidate public support for bilateral friendship, and accelerate the building of an even closer China-Pakistan community with a shared future.
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