Thursday, 14 June 2012
By Rann Reuy
Phnom Penh Post
Cambodia yesterday signed deals for about US$430 million in loans
from China, the latest in a number of high-profile borrowing deals with
its northern neighbour.
The bulk of the loans, from Export-Import Bank of China,
would go towards two national road projects and a multipurpose dam in
Battambang, according to documents obtained by the Post.
An extension on the rehabilitation of National Road 6 alone was set to cost about $250 million.
The
signing ceremony, chaired by Prime Minister Hun Sen and China Politburo
Standing Committee member He Guoqiang, generated fierce criticism from
the opposition Sam Rainsy Party, which called the borrowing opaque.
The Kingdom signed on for $302 million in similar loans from China in February.
Although an exact figure for Cambodia’s debt to China has been disputed, Minister of Economy and Finance Keat Chhon in February said the figure stood at about $1.8 billion.
The prime minister yesterday touted the borrowing as a boost to the development of Cambodia.
“China’s
progress has led to harmony in neighbouring countries including
Cambodia,” Hun Sen’s personal adviser Eang Sophallet quoted the premier
as having said.
“Chinese aid has not only helped the development of Cambodia’s economy, it has also helped Cambodia to be independent.”
Yesterday’s signing also included a $2 million deal with China’s biggest technology company Huawei for what the document called a “Hotline and Traffic Control Project”. Officials at the company could not be reached.
A
$550,000 hospital project donated by the China Foundation for Peace and
Development, as well as the delivery of two Chinese-built MA60
aircraft, was also noted in the document.
The International Monetary Fund and the World Bank
earlier this year called Cambodia’s debt levels stable, but questioned
the country’s ability to manage future economic crises if borrowing
continued.
A joint report issued by the two institutions in late
February estimated Cambodia’s foreign debt at about 28 per cent of gross
domestic product for both 2011 and 2012.
Although debt levels
were projected to increase from about $4 billion to $5.6 billion over
the next four years, its share of GDP will decrease by about a
percentage point to nearly 27 per cent.
Yim Sovann, spokesperson
for Sam Rainsy Party, said access to information concerning Cambodia’s
debt to China was restricted, even to members of parlament.
He claimed that the Kingdom’s external debt was more than $6 billion, at least a third of which was owed to China.
“These
loans are dollars that Cambodian citizens owe and have to pay back
through tax payments. The most important thing is to curb the corruption
that leads to these failures in transparency,” he said.
The
lending, which China has often advertised as having “no strings
attached”, entitled Chinese companies to exploit Cambodia’s mineral
wealth and land concessions, he added.
To contact the reporter on this story: Rann Reuy at reuy.rann@phnompenhpost.com
1 comment:
Yes more loan. Hun Sen will wipe his ass with US dollar and our Khmer people will pay for it.
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