Manila Bulletin

Malaysia axes project to build hi-speed rail link with Singapore

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KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) – Malaysia is cancelling a project to build a high-speed rail link between its capital, Kuala Lumpur, and Singapore, and will talk with its southern neighbor about any compensati­on Malaysia has to pay, Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad said.

Mahathir, the 92-year-old who triumphed in a general election this month, has made it a priority to cut the national debt and pledged to review big projects agreed by his predecesso­r that he says are expensive and have no financial benefit.

"It is a final decision, but it will take time because we have an agreement with Singapore," Mahathir told a news conference referring to his scrapping of the project, valued by analysts at about $17 billion.

The project is out for tender and was scheduled to be completed by 2026.

Mahathir said Malaysia may have to pay about 500 million ringgit ($125.63 million) to Singapore to get out of the deal.

"We had agreed to proceed with the high speed rail project based on mutual benefits and obligation­s," Singapore's Ministry of Trade said in a statement.

"We will wait for official communicat­ion from Malaysia."

Companies from China, Japan, South Korea and Europe were eyeing a contract to build, operate and finance the trains and the rail assets, sources close to the bidding process had told Reuters.

Even picking a winner was expected to test ties between Malaysia and Singapore, which have been frosty since the end of the colonial era in the 1960s, against the backdrop of broader tension over China's growing influence in the region.

About 90 percent of the rail network was set to be in Malaysia, including a terminal in Bandar Malaysia, a big property developmen­t owned by scandal-hit state fund 1Malaysia Developmen­t Berhad (1MDB).

A $1.7-billion deal to sell a majority stake in Bandar Malaysia to a Malaysian-Chinese consortium fell through in May 2017. A year on, the project has failed to attract any buyers.

Mahathir has reopened an investigat­ion into 1MDB following his election victory. It is being investigat­ed in other countries, including the United States.

Properties linked to former prime minister Najib Razak have been searched as part of the investigat­ion, and Najib has given statements to an anti-graft agency.

Najib has long denied any wrongdoing.

Mahathir said his government was also in the process of renegotiat­ing with Chinese partners over the terms of a $14billion rail deal aimed at connecting the South China Sea at the Thai border in the east with the strategic shipping routes of the Straits of Malacca in the west.

He estimates that Malaysia could cut almost a fifth of its $250-billion national debt and liabilitie­s by scrapping such big projects.

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