Gulf News

Saudi builder Binladin says government paying dues

Firm barred from receiving new state contracts after crane collapse that killed 107

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The Saudi finance ministry has resumed payments to Saudi Binladin Group (SBG), the kingdom’s biggest constructi­on firm, for its work on government projects, Saudi Okaz newspaper reported yesterday, citing an adviser to the chairman.

SBG was hard hit last year as low oil prices forced the government — its chief customer — to cancel or suspend projects and delay payments.

It was then barred from receiving new state contracts after one of its cranes toppled into Makkah’s Grand Mosque during a storm, killing 107 people, though that ban has now been lifted.

“With the series of payments to follow from the ministry of finance, the entire rights of 10,000 contractor­s, suppliers, traders that deal with SBG will be met,” adviser Abdullah Basodan told the newspaper.

He said SBG chairman Bakr Binladin had met employees to reassure them about the future of the company.

The firm has been the leading builder in the kingdom for several years, delivering a number of major buildings including the expansion of the Grand Mosque in Makkah.

But its status has come under threat from government spending cuts and economic reforms as well as its temporary suspension from new state contracts.

A cash squeeze left it struggling under an estimated $30 billion (Dh110 billion) in debt owed to local and internatio­nal lenders.

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