Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Bank of China’s US $ 300mn loan to Sri Lanka faces delay

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„SL was to receive the loan

before end of January „Now Colombo expecting a response from China by Feb. 20 (Colombo) REUTERS: A US $ 300 million loan offered by Bank of China to Sri Lanka is facing delays, government officials familiar with the negotiatio­n told Reuters.

The Indian Ocean island nation, a key battlegrou­nd in the tussle for influence in South Asia between China and traditiona­l regional power India, was due to receive the loan before the end of January, but it is now unlikely to be finalised until later this month, according to four officials.

Treasury Secretary and Finance and Mass Media Ministry Secretary Dr. R.H.S. Samaratung­a said Colombo expected a response from the bank by February 20, meaning the loan may not be finalised for several more weeks.

“They had asked a few questions and we have responded,” he told Reuters.

“Then they said they will come back. But now they say they want to consult their head office.”

Sri Lanka is seeking the loan, which it said could be raised to US $ 1 billion by the end of March, as it struggles to repay foreign debts after a political crisis delayed the government’s borrowing plan.

The country is due to repay a record US $ 5.9 billion this year, including US $ 2.6 billion in the first three months.

“Usually if Chinese banks promise a loan, they give it quickly and on time,” a top government official, who is aware of the negotiatio­n, told Reuters.

The official said the negotiatio­n, which was due to be closed in the last week of January, had dragged on after the Chinese bank had asked for “in-depth and lengthy data unlike in the previous negotiatio­ns” to compile the loan and the Finance Ministry needed more than a week to compile the data.

A third official, who is also involved with the negotiatio­n, said Sri Lanka was likely to receive the loan by the end of February, “if all goes well”.

“We can only start negotiatio­ns after February 14 due to Chinese New Year holidays. Then we need to go through Cabinet approval,” he told Reuters, asking not to be identified because he is not authorised to talk to the media.

A fourth official said the government would negotiate on increasing the loan to US $ 1 billion separately after receiving US $ 300 million.

Officials from the Bank of China were not immediatel­y available for comment.on January 17, the Central Bank chief told Reuters that the country would receive a US $ 300 million loan from Bank of China before the end of January and another US $ 700 million by end-march.

Investor confidence took a hit when President Maithripal­a Sirisena abruptly sacked Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe in October, replaced him with pro-china former president Mahinda Rajapaksa and dissolved Parliament.

Sri Lanka’s top court then ruled the dissolutio­n of Parliament was illegal and Wickremesi­nghe was reinstated in December but the seven-week-long crisis has strained state finances.

A series of credit rating downgrades during the crisis has made it harder for Sri Lanka to tap internatio­nal capital markets.

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