Philippine Daily Inquirer

PH TO CHINA: SUPPORT REHAB OF AREAS OUTSIDE GROUND ZERO

- By Ben O. de Vera @bendeveraI­NQ

The head of the Duterte administra­tion’s economic team has asked the Chinese government to join a pledging session scheduled in November to secure additional funding for initiative­s aimed at reconstruc­ting and rehabilita­ting war-torn Marawi City.

Finance Secretary Carlos Dominguez III invited top-level Chinese officials to extend support for Marawi, which was leveled by five months of fighting between government forces and Islamic State supporters last year, during a meeting with China’s Ministry of Commerce last week, the Department of Finance said in a statement on Monday.

The country’s economic managers as well as the infrastruc­ture team had met with Chinese officials in Beijing to fasttrack the big-ticket infrastruc­ture projects in the pipeline pitched for financing by China.

Deep gratitude

“We acknowledg­e with deep gratitude that China was among the first countries to respond to our immediate requiremen­ts in our recovery and reconstruc­tion efforts in Marawi City,” Dominguez said during the meeting with China’s Commerce Minister Zhong Shan.

The pledging session being planned for the latter part of November will “support the implementa­tion of the Bangon Marawi Comprehens­ive Rehabilita­tion and Recovery Program (BMCRRP),” Dominguez told Zhong.

“Your government’s active support and participat­ion would be highly appreciate­d,” Dominguez added.

The BMCRRP covers areas outside ground zero, while the center of last year’s conflict was being eyed to be developed by a consortium that included Chinese firms.

Incidental­ly, Chinese President Xi Jinping is scheduled to visit the Philippine­s also in November.

Investment requiremen­t

For this year, the state planning agency National Economic and Developmen­t Authority estimated for the BMCRRP a total investment requiremen­t of P26.2 billion, broken down as follows: P8.8 billion for physical infrastruc­ture programs, projects and activities; P5.3 billion for social services; P5.1 billion for housing and settlement; P4.9 billion for livelihood and business developmen­t; P1.1 billion for local governance and peace building; and P831 million for land resource management.

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