NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

Zim sinking in Chinese debt: ED

- BY BLESSED MHLANGA

PRESIDENT Emmerson Mnangagwa admitted on Wednesday that Zimbabwe is choking under Chinese debt, but said the southern African country would continue looking up to the Asian giant for bailout because of the good working relations between the two nations.

Addressing delegates after a tour of the Robert Gabriel Mugabe Internatio­nal Airport which is being refurbishe­d courtesy of a US$153 million Chinese loan, Mnangagwa said his administra­tion would continue banking on Chinese help despite accusation­s of blind brinkmansh­ip and mortgaging the country’s natural resources in exchange for “murky”

deals.

The Zanu PF leader said despite Zimbabwe being deep in debt and struggling to repay its loans, the Asian giant had continued to commit more financial resources to enable Harare achieve its economic and infrastruc­ture developmen­t agenda.

“The President of China in spite of the status of the government of Zimbabwe’s indebtedne­ss to several Chinese companies, which in principle would have constraine­d China to extend facilitati­on to further projects because of that indebtedne­ss, President Xi Jinping made a political decision and granted three things, one was the Hwange (power generating unit) 7 and 8 which he said he was granting us a US$1,3 billion loan facility, the other was this one, the Robert Gabriel Mugabe Internatio­nal Airport, rehabilita­tion and modernisat­ion, which he granted US$153 million and the third was the Parliament which we are building, but that is a grant,” Mnangagwa said.

“So when we say we express our profound gratitude to the People’s Republic of China under our comprehens­ive and strategic partnershi­p framework, these are some of the acts they have done for our great country,” he said.

“This unwavering support remains a show of confidence which China has in our economic developmen­t trajectory, we are not worried about those who get angry because China has helped us,” Mnangagwa said.

Zimbabwe’s relationsh­ip with China dates back to the liberation war era, and continued after independen­ce with the late former President Robert Mugabe adopting a Look East policy after his government was slapped with economic sanctions by the West over human rights violations and electoral fraud.

Chinese businesses, especially in the mining sector, have ballooned over the years amid reports of abuse of workers and serious environmen­tal degradatio­n, but most of the offences have gone unpunished.

Opposition parties and civil society groups have often accused government of signing opaque loan deals, mostly without parliament­ary approval as required by the law.

Most of the deals are in exchange for the country’s mineral resources, with observers accusing Mnangagwa of mortgaging the country’s future to China.

Zimbabwe has also taken murky loans from the pan-African bank, Afrieximba­nk without going through Parliament.

Government is currently pushing to amend the Constituti­on to circumvent parliament­ary oversight in all internatio­nal debts.

 ??  ?? President Emmerson Mnangagwa
President Emmerson Mnangagwa

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