Fiji Sun

China, Malaysia Restart Belt and Road rail, talk Investment­s, Visitors

- Potential Investors Economic Developmen­t Source: Reuters News Agency Feedback: maraia.vula@fijisun.com.fj

China and Malaysia resumed constructi­on on a massive Belt and Road rail project in northern Malaysia on Thursday, after a year-long suspension and following a rare agreement to cut its cost by nearly a third to about US$11bn.

The project was initially cancelled by Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad, who came to power after a shock election victory in

May last year.

He followed through a pledge to renegotiat­e or cancel “unfair” Chinese megaprojec­ts. The projects were approved by his predecesso­r, Najib Razak.

But in April, the close trade partners agreed to proceed with the East Coast Rail Link (ECRL) at a cost of 44 billion ringgit (US$10.7bn), reducing it from 65.5 billion ringgit (US$15.9bn). The 640km line, with China Communicat­ions Constructi­on Co Ltd as the lead contractor, will connect Port Klang on the Strait of Malacca with the city of Kota Bharu in northeaste­rn peninsular Malaysia. The agreement to resume work on the project had boosted confidence in Malaysia among foreign investors, China’s ambassador to Malaysia said at a ceremony in the coastal district of Dungun. Flanked by cranes and trucks parked near a partly completed section of a tunnel, Ambassador Bai Tian spoke of “a great wave” of potential Chinese investors coming to Malaysia for field studies. He expected many of them to decide to invest.

China is debt-heavy Malaysia’s biggest trade partner and the countries have close cultural ties. Ambassador Bai said the completion of the ECRL, expected by December 2026, could more than double the number of Chinese tourists coming in to Malaysia from three million last year.

Malaysia Rail Link, the project’s local partner, said in a statement that up to 70 percent of the workers will be local and that domestic contractor­s will get 40 percent of the civil works.

The Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) has been praised for its potential to speed up economic developmen­t in many emerging countries.

However, they have also been criticised for potentiall­y saddling some of them with unsustaina­ble debt. Malaysia’s Finance Minister Lim Guan Eng told Reuters on Monday that Beijing had offered them more BRI infrastruc­ture investment­s and that Kuala Lumpur would consider them “if the pricing is right”.

Malaysia is already identifyin­g new joint investment opportunit­ies with China along the ECRL corridor, Malaysian Transport Minister Anthony Loke said at the Dungun event.

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 ?? Photo: Lim Huey Teng/Reuters ?? Chinese and Malaysian Government officials onsite for the resumption of the Belt and Road rail project.
Photo: Lim Huey Teng/Reuters Chinese and Malaysian Government officials onsite for the resumption of the Belt and Road rail project.

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