Islamabad: Chinese President Xi Jinping will arrive here on Monday on his maiden visit to Pakistan during which the two sides will sign several agreements, including defence deals, amounting to $50 billion (Dh184 billion) that will stabilise Pakistan’s economy and expand the Communist giant’s influence in the region.

A fleet of eight JF-17 Thunder fighter jets — jointly made by the two countries — will escort the Chinese president once his plane enters Pakistani airspace.

A red-carpet welcome will be accorded to Xi who has chosen Pakistan as his first destination for a foreign tour in 2015 after cancelling previous trips.

The Pakistan Foreign Office said Xi will meet President Mamnoon Hussain and hold official talks with Prime Minister Nawaz Sharif. He will also meet the chiefs of three services and address a joint session of Parliament.

President Xi, also the General-Secretary of the ruling Communist Party, will be conferred the ‘Nishan-e-Pakistan’, Pakistan’s highest civilian award, at a special ceremony.

“Both countries would conclude a number of important agreements/MoUs relating to key development projects in the infrastructure, energy, and communication sectors under the ambit of the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor,” the Foreign Office said without giving details.

An official at the finance ministry told PTI agreements and MoUs worth about $50 billion are expected to be signed under the China-Pakistan Economic Corridor (CPEC).

China has decided to go ahead with the ambitious project despite serious security concern in its restive Muslim- dominated Xinjiang region as well as the Taliban threat in Pakistan.

The corridor, regarded as the biggest connectivity project between the two countries after Karakorram highway built in 1979, is a centrepiece of China’s ambitions to shorten the route for its energy imports from the Middle East.

The 3,000-km long corridor linking China’s far-western region to Pakistan’s south-western Gwadar port on the Arabian Sea through Pakistan-administered Kashmir is a massive project of road, rail, energy schemes, pipelines and investment parks.

In the short-term, energy projects of about $35 billion are planned for execution. It is being planned to operationalise these projects by 2018 to create about 10,400MW of electricity. Another $11 billion will be invested on infrastructure projects.

China played down India’s concerns on the corridor, saying it is being laid through Pakistan administered Kashmir and said it is a commercial project.

“The project between China and Pakistan does not concern the relevant dispute between India and Pakistan. So I do not think that the Indian side should be concerned about that,” Assistant Foreign Minister Liu Jianchao said last week.

A defence agreement worth $4-5 billion to provide eight latest submarines is also expected to be signed, more than doubling Pakistan’s fleet.

The submarines would help enhance Pakistan’s naval power, a move that could raise India’s concern.

Xi will also perform the ground-breaking ceremony of several infrastructure projects, including a $44 million cross-border fibre optic data communication system project, a digital terrestrial multimedia broadcast pilot project at Murree, $1.4 billion Orange Line Mass Transit project in Lahore and a cultural centre in Islamabad.