The Borneo Post

China defers Tonga’s loan payments as Pacific nation signs up to Belt and Road

-

PORT MORESBY: Tonga has signed up to China’s Belt and Road initiative and has received a reprieve from Beijing on the timing of debt payments shortly before an onerous schedule to repay loans was due to start.

Lopeti Senituli, political advisor to Tongan Prime Minister ‘Akilisi Pohiva, told Reuters by email yesterday that Tonga had signed a Belt and Road memorandum of understand­ing, and that the concession­al loan had been deferred for five years.

Tonga is one of eight island nations in the South Pacific that owe significan­t debt to China.

The deferment came just as Tonga was set to commence principal repayments on the debt, which is expected to put severe strain on its finances.

China’s ministry of foreign affairs did not immediatel­y respond to request for comment yesterday.

Tonga’s financial reliance on China dates back just over a decade after deadly riots in the capital of Tonga, Nuku’alofa, destroyed much of the small Pacific nation’s central business and government districts.

The government rebuilt the city with Chinese financing, and the roughly US$ 65 million in China’s initial loans to the island now exceeds US$ 115 million, due to interest and additional borrowings.

This represents almost one-third of Tonga’s annual gross domestic product, budget papers show

The issue of Chinese-issued debt has been at the forefront of the Asia Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n summit, held in Papua New Guinea ( PNG).

On Saturday, US Vice President Mike Pence criticised President Xi Jinping’s flagship programme, saying countries should not accept debt that compromise­d their sovereignt­y.

While most Pacific island nations are not APEC members, their representa­tives were invited to attend events, and have been engaged in talks with larger regional neighbours such as China and Australia.

China’s official Belt and Road website reported last week that Fiji had made a commitment to Belt and Road, joining the likes of Samoa and PNG. — Reuters

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia