The Denver Post

Trump Indonesia project gets Chinese government partner

- By Bernard Condon and Jonathan Lemire

AChinese government-owned company has signed on to build a theme park in a vast developmen­t in Indonesia that also features a Trump hotel and condos, a deal that stands to benefit President Donald Trump’s company just as top Chinese envoys head to Washington for trade talks.

In a move that has alarmed Trump critics, an Indonesian company confirmed this week that it hired the subsidiary of the state-owned Metallurgi­cal Corp. of China to build a theme park in its Lido City developmen­t outside Jakarta.

The property owner three years earlier struck a deal for the developmen­t to include a Trump-branded hotel, 400 luxury villas and condos, and an 18-hole championsh­ip golf course.

Even though Trump’s involvemen­t in the project predated his election, ethics experts say it’s still trouble for the president, possibly putting him in violation of the emoluments clause of the Constituti­on, which bans gifts from foreign government­s.

“This clearly benefits the Trump Organizati­on, and therefore its owner Donald Trump,” said Harvard Law professor Laurence Tribe, who is advising on several lawsuits against the president. He added that it is irrelevant if the benefit came “indirectly” from China through the Indonesian company.

MNC Land, the Indonesian company that is developing the park, is owned by billionair­e Hary Tanoesoedi­bjo, who attended Trump’s inaugurati­on last year. In a statement, MNC Land said the Trump Organizati­on has “no relationsh­ip” with the theme

park that the Chinese company is building. It also said that news reports that a Chinese government-backed $500 million loan for the project had been signed were false.

White House officials steered clear of talk of Chinese backing for the project, dismissing the belief that it could violate the emoluments clause or the Trump Organizati­on’s pledge to refrain from new foreign business while the president was in office.

Staffers pointed to an answer Monday from White House deputy press secretary Raj Shah, who referred all questions to the president’s business. The Trump Organizati­on declined to comment.

The deal also raised questions about possible links between the investment and the president’s seemingly out-of-theblue tweet Sunday in which he called for Chinese telecommun­ications company ZTE to “get back into business, fast” because “too many jobs in China” had been lost, a call to help that seemed a stark departure from Trump’s “America First” foreign policy.

White House officials denied any connection between the company and the Indonesia project. Instead, they framed the tweet as a call to protect American jobs — many of the ZTE components are made in the United States — and placed it in the context of ongoing negotiatio­ns about trade between the two countries certain to accelerate when senior Chinese officials arrive in Washington later this week.

The overture could also reduce tension with Beijing as Trump leans on China for help in the weeks before his summit with North Korea leader Kim Jong Un in Singapore.

 ?? Bay Ismoyo, AFP/Getty Images ?? A man is at the helm of a floating restaurant on a lake that is part of an Indonesian developmen­t that includes a theme park and a Trump hotel and condos. A subsidiary of Chinese state-owned constructi­on firm Metallurgi­cal Corporatio­n of China signed a...
Bay Ismoyo, AFP/Getty Images A man is at the helm of a floating restaurant on a lake that is part of an Indonesian developmen­t that includes a theme park and a Trump hotel and condos. A subsidiary of Chinese state-owned constructi­on firm Metallurgi­cal Corporatio­n of China signed a...

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