Uganda seeks to amend pact with China on airport-loan clauses

Bloomberg

Uganda is seeking to amend a loan agreement it signed with China in 2015 to ensure the government doesn’t lose control of the nation’s only international airport, the Monitor newspaper reported, citing people with knowledge of the matter.
The East African nation borrowed $200 million from the Export-Import Bank of China to expand the Entebbe airport, according to the report.
Among the clauses that the government wants to change is the need for the Uganda Civil Aviation Authority to seek approval from the Chinese lender for its budget and strategic plans, the Monitor reported. Another rule mandates that any dispute between the parties will have to be resolved by the China International Economic and Trade Arbitration Commission, according to the newspaper.
The spokesman for Uganda’s aviation regulator and China’s director general for African Affairs in separate tweets denied that the Chinese lender had taken over the airport.
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokesman Wang Wenbin also dismissed the report at a regular press conference in Beijing.
“All loan agreements were signed on voluntary basis,” Wang said. “The so-called detention or takeover of projects or assets by China’s financial institutions are purely made up out of malicious intent without any basis.” “In fact, there is no project that has been taken over by China due to debt issues,” he added.
China’s Belt and Road projects have been dogged by controversy across the world. In Sri Lanka, the government in 2017 agreed to lease a port to a venture led by China Merchants Port Holdings Co for 99 years in return for $1.1 billion. In Pakistan plans originally to build
a seaport, roads, railways, pipelines, dozens of factories and the largest airport in the nation are yet to be realised.

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