The Borneo Post

France provides 550 million euros in aid to Lebanon to boost economy

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PARIS: France said yesterday it would provide Lebanon 550 million euros (US$ 672 million) to support economic reforms in a country struggling from the impact of the war in neighbouri­ng Syria.

Internatio­nal donors are looking to hold Lebanon to promises of badly-needed reforms at a Paris conference on Thursday where the Beirut government hopes to win support for a US$ 16 billion capital investment plan.

Lebanon has billed the conference as a show of internatio­nal backing for a country hosting 1.5 million Syrian refugees and an economy hit by the fallout of Syria’s sevenyearo­ld war.

“France will announce a substantia­l effort of 400 million euros in concession­ary loans and 150 million euros in donations to match its ambitions for Lebanon,” Jean-Yves Le Drian told the opening of the conference.

Lebanon, which has one of the highest levels of state debt in the world, is hoping to secure support for the first phase of the capital investment plan, costed at US$ 10 billion, to revamp infrastruc­ture.

Projects include roads, power generation capacity and public transport.

“We are a little country facing enormous political, economic and security challenges and these challenges are exacerbate­d by the war in Syria and the crisis of displaced Syrians in Lebanon,” Lebanon’s Prime Minister Saad alHariri said, calling for substantia­l financial support from the internatio­nal community.

“Lebanon’s recovery must start the challenge today is to reverse the (negative) trend in terms of growth, poverty and unemployme­nt and the government must play the main role.”

Lebanon seeks one third of the support from private sector investment and the rest from grants and concession­al funding. But donors want to see Beirut follow through on reforms to curb levels of public debt that economists see as unsustaina­ble.

The Paris conference, convening 50 countries and organisati­ons, including Saudi Arabia, United States, Russia and Qatar, is expected to set up a follow-up mechanism to track progress. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Hariri (left) is welcomed by Le Drian as they attend the internatio­nal CEDRE conference in Paris. — AFP photo
Hariri (left) is welcomed by Le Drian as they attend the internatio­nal CEDRE conference in Paris. — AFP photo

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