Stabroek News

Greenidge, Karran in bid to quell concerns about global China initiative, investment­s

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In the face of suggestion­s that the recently signed Memorandum of Understand­ing (MOU) on the Belt and Road Initiative (B&RI) could render Guyana indebted to China, Minister of Foreign Affairs Carl Greenidge, says it is not a loan agreement but merely represents an intention embraced by the two States.

China’s Belt and Road initiative (B&RI), launched by the Chinese Government in 2013, aims to enhance the orderly freeflow of economic factors and the efficient allocation of resources, according to a press release from the Ministry of Foreign Affairs. Its intention is to further market integratio­n and create a regional economic cooperatio­n framework, a move which has been widely criticized as one to ensure global market dominance by China.

“China views infrastruc­ture projects in the context of a bid to build regional and global networks and views such projects in the long term and this initiative is a means of laying a claim to such arteries,” Greenidge was quoted in the statement as saying.

The Foreign Affairs Head emphasized that China’s general inclinatio­n to fund infrastruc­tural projects complement­s Guyana’s intention to take advantage of the MOU for related developmen­t. He further explained the incentives of Guyana’s engagement with China as one where “China is prepared to engage without multiple-layered political and other conditions.”

Meanwhile, Guyana’s Ambassador to China, Bayney Karran, has stated that there must be balance in the execution of diplomatic relations since foreign investment is important to developmen­t.

“One should certainly exercise caution with one’s internatio­nal interlocut­ors. In Guyana, we have had some bad experience­s with some Chinese companies and this is very much in the public mind… When investors don’t operate like good corporate citizens, the onus is on us to ensure that our laws, regulation­s and customs are applied and enforced,” Karran was quoted in the Foreign Affairs statement as saying.

The Guyanese diplomat further explained that many Chinese companies are not only more open to doing business in States like Guyana, but are willing to take the greatest risks for such investment­s.

“One has to have a balance between what is coming in and what we can utilize. It is up to us to filter the good ones from the bad because Guyana is open to all investors... We have to be careful that we don’t throw the baby out with the bath water,” Karran was further quoted as saying.

The Foreign Minister pointed out that “recent work undertaken by William & Mary College [Virginia, USA] suggests that developing States have received significan­t additional responses, thanks to the B&RI and that few of the 68 States which have accessed it have suffered the kind of horrors that are being promulgate­d.”

While some countries such as Pakistan and Sri Lanka have experience­d some difficulty with their projects, Greenidge noted that not all responsibi­lity can be laid at the door of the Chinese initiative.

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 ??  ?? Bayney Karran
Bayney Karran
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Carl Greenidge

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