The Phnom Penh Post

Report ‘misleading’: IFC representa­tives

- Leonie Kijewski

THE World Bank’s private investment arm, the Internatio­nal Finance Corporatio­n (IFC), hit back yesterday at allegation­s by the NGO Inclusive Developmen­t Internatio­nal (ID) that it indirectly contribute­d to land grabbing, environmen­tal destructio­n and rights violations through its funding of regional banks, which in turn have funded controvers­ial projects, including in Cambodia.

The IFC’s head of communicat­ions for East Asia and the Pacific, Tina Taheri Moayed, said in an email on Tuesday that there were “many factual inaccuraci­es” in the report, which she said were “misleading”.

“Many of the sub-projects mentioned either pre-date or fall outside the scope of IFC’s investment with the financial institutio­n mentioned,” she said.

However, IDI’s managing director David Pred maintained in an email that his organisati­on stands by its findings “100%”.

“IFC should have never made those investment­s in the first place, or it should have required remedial action as a pre-condition of its investment,” he said.

But IFC spokesman Frederick Jones on Wednesday night countered that the controvers­ial investment­s made by banks and private equity funds had preceded IFC involvemen­t. “Performanc­e standards do not apply retroactiv­ely to a bank’s portfolio,” he said.

Among the investment­s criticised was the IFC’s funding of Vietinbank, which is accused in the report of having funded the controvers­ial Lower Sesan II dam project, a hydropower project in Stung Treng province that has involved forced evictions of residents.

Jones insisted Vietinbank – which the IFC funded to the tune of $307 million in 2011 – did not finance the project.

However, according to documents on Vietinbank’s own website, it has been providing credit services to Electricit­y Vietnam (EVN) since 2006. The following year, EVN signed a memorandum of understand­ing with the Cambodian government, becoming a major stakeholde­r in the dam project. It publicly claimed to have divested from the dam in 2012.

Jones said that the IFC’s investment in equity fund Dragon Capital, which was linked to land grabbing in the northeast of Cambodia, predated the IFC’s Sustainabi­lity Policy requiremen­t that came into effect in 2006.

“We have strong and robust accountabi­lity mechanisms, like the CAO [compliance advisor ombudsman], that can help address issues as well,” he said.

Pred, however, was not convinced by IFC’s accountabi­lity mechanisms, saying that the money the IFC has invested in banks and equity funds has been found by its own internal watchdog to only be traceable in “10 percent” of cases.

According to Jones, Dragon Capital, a fund that drew IFC investment, pulled support in 2015 from the company Hoang Anh Gia Lai (HAGL), which is accused of grabbing land and clearing forests in Cambodia.

But Equitable Cambodia director Eang Vuthy said Dragon Capital having pulled out did not relieve the IFC of its responsibi­lity for prior conflicts, noting that while some cooperatio­n had been “very fruitful . . . The problem has not been solved”

He added that his NGO had submitted a complaint related to HAGL to the CAO, which now serves as an intermedia­ry in negotiatio­ns.

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