The Borneo Post

China funding ‘Pacific white elephants’ — Australia minister

-

SYDNEY: China is funding ‘white elephant’ infrastruc­ture projects in the Pacific at unfavourab­le terms, a senior Australia minister said Wednesday in comments that could fuel further tensions between Canberra and Beijing.

Friction between the two countries grew last month after Australia singled out China as a focus of concern when it proposed laws on foreign interferen­ce, drawing a furious response from Beijing.

China has been forging closer links with Pacific island nations, with Australia’s Lowy Institute estimating it provided US$1.78 billion in aid, including concession­al loans, for projects in the region between 2006 to 2016.

Australia’s Internatio­nal Developmen­t Minister Concetta Fierravant­i-Wells said Beijing’s influence in the region was ‘clearly growing’, but criticised its developmen­t assistance as resulting in ‘white elephants’.

“You’ve got the Pacific full of these useless buildings which nobody maintains, which are basically white elephants,” she told The Australian newspaper.

Fierravant­i-Wells said in her 24 trips to the Pacific as part of her internatio­nal developmen­t portfolio, she had come across ‘ nonproduct­ive infrastruc­ture’ that was not regularly maintained and not used to full capacity.

“I’ve gone to (the Pacific) islands and you’ll be driving along on some back road and all of a sudden you see this Chinese road crew building a road to nowhere and you think ‘ hmm, what’s all that about’,” she added.

The minister also warned that unlike loans from the World Bank and the Asian Developmen­t Bank, Chinese financing had less than favourable terms.

“We don’t know what the consequenc­es are when (Pacific nations) have to pay back some of these Chinese loans,” she said.

China has diplomatic relationsh­ips with eight Pacific island nations – the Cook Islands, the Federated States of Micronesia, Fiji, Niue, Papua New Guinea, Samoa, Tonga, and Vanuatu.

Six other Pacific countries recognise Taiwan, which China sees as part of its territory. — AFP

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia