The Freeman

Rama: Congress probe delaying airport project

- — Kristine B. Quintas/rhm

Cebu City Mayor Michael Rama yesterday complained that the congressio­nal inquiry on the P17.5-billion Mactan Cebu Internatio­nal Airport (MCIA) expansion plan has caused further delay on the implementa­tion of the long-overdue project.

"Do we deserve this whole confusion, which is bringing our country or Cebu damnation? Do we deserve this whole shenanigan? This is not the time that people will be more confused. This is the time that clarity should be made," he said.

Rama said whoever won the bidding process should already be awarded the project.

" If ( there are) people (who) are being maligned, unnecessar­ily destroyed, they have their lawyers. Let them file whatever legal remedies available. (But) let the people be spared from all these shenanigan­s," Rama said.

The GMR- Megawide consortium tendered the highest bid for the multi-billion MCIA terminal publicpriv­ate partnershi­p project.

Second-highest bidder Filinvest-Changi consortium, however, filed a complaint against GMR for allegedly violating Pre- bidding and Awards Committee (PBAC) regulation­s.

Filinvest alleged that GMR worked with a bidder, Malaysian Airports Holding Berhad's airport affiliates, which violated the bid rules provision that prohibits "a board member or partner of a bidder consortium member or its affiliates… from being directly involved in any capacity in the MCIA bid process for another bidder, consortium member and its affiliates."

Rama said expansion of the airport terminal is "badly needed and urgent," especially that major events happening in Cebu are already fast approachin­g, like the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperatio­n (APEC) next year and the Internatio­nal Eucharisti­c Congress (IEC) in 2016.

"This is the time that our voices must be heard because we are contributi­ng so much to this country's economy; we need the airport that would bring in tourists and enable us to prepare more for APEC and the IEC," Rama said.

In an unrelated developmen­t, Rama said the city's executive department is planning to negotiate with the bank that serves as conduit in its South Road Properties (SRP) loan for it to "restructur­e" the scheme of paying the amortizati­on.

"This will ease us out and remove us from so much unbearable pain. If we will not stop this currency fluctuatio­n, we will end up paying until 2025. We have to do something drastic," he said.

The City government made a loan in 1995 worth 12.315-billion yen or P6.5 billion from Japan Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n Agency (JICA), formerly the Japan Bank for Internatio­nal Cooperatio­n, to develop the 300-hectare reclamatio­n project now called SRP.

Fluctuatio­ns in the exchange rates, however, caused the loan to balloon to several billion pesos more.

Rama said the city already paid about P7 billion in amortizati­on since 2001, but until now the city has still to pay JICA P3 billion.

"Maayo kaha na ?Nindot kaha na nga klasi nga kontrata? Dili gyud (Is this good? Is that a good arrangemen­t? I don't think so)," Rama said.

Last Feb. 20, the city paid its 19th amortizati­on amounting to P218 million. The city pays its SRP loan twice a year.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Philippines