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Uganda’s Loss Of International Airport To China - Punch. - Politics - Nairaland

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Uganda’s Loss Of International Airport To China - Punch. by Georgry(m): 8:12am On Dec 06, 2021
The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic that originated in China in the late 2019 crippled countries worldwide with smaller and poor economies taking a big hit. Reduction in revenues and foreign aid has affected these countries’ spending and thus their ability to repay loans.

Uganda is facing the biggest national crisis as it has been forced to surrender its only international airport to China for failing to pay back the loan it had taken in 2015. It had borrowed USD 207 million from the Export-Import Bank of China (Exim Bank). Now, the country is set to lose the strategic Entebbe International Airport to China, thus losing a vital component of its sovereignty.

Uganda now joins the club of Sri Lanka, Malaysia, Maldives, who have been stuck in the “debt trap” created by “predatory” conditions of Chinese loans especially under the aegis of the Belt and Road Initiative. Pakistan, Thailand, Kenya, Sudan, Ethiopia, Laos and Cambodia are some other countries that are on the verge of suffering a similar fate over debt failure.

When the agreement was signed in 2015, many in the East African country raised doubts over the provisions favouring China. Moreover, the rights and obligations of both parties were decided to be governed by the laws of China. This forced Uganda to agree to the conditions that waive any immunity to its assets including those characterised as sovereign from any suit, the jurisdiction of any arbitral institution or arbitral tribunal, judgment. Experts had felt it was as good as mortgaging the airport for the Chinese loan. Now, their fears finally came true.

Uganda’s debt has touched USD 17.96 billion, which is almost 50 per cent of its GDP. And the country is under tremendous pressure to repay $3bn in just the next 10 years.

Ugandan President, Yoweri Museveni, recently sent a delegation to Beijing to renegotiate the loans. However, the request was turned down as China refused to allow any alteration in the original terms of the loan agreement. This means Uganda is likely to forfeit the Entebbe International Airport that handles over 1.9 million passengers annually.

Uganda’s Finance Minister, Matia Kasaija, has apologised to the country’s parliament for the loan fiasco as China prepares to take over the Entebbe airport. “I apologise that we shouldn’t have accepted some of the clauses,” he said. The agreement has a specific clause of ‘surrendering’ of its most prominent airport if Uganda cannot pay back the loan. However, people in Uganda were unaware of these clauses when the deal was signed in 2015. Now, it is coming to the fore that the Uganda Civil Aviation Authority had red-flagged the clauses that were detrimental to the country’s interest.

The UCAA managing director, David Kakuba, said, “Some 13 clauses were deemed unfriendly and as good as mortgaging the airport and eroding the country’s sovereignty. The most troubling for the aviation bosses was a clause that gave Exim Bank the sole authority to approve withdrawal of funds from the UCAA accounts.” China also froze disbursement of loan amounts after the UACC did not implement some of the clauses that were not favourable for Uganda. This slowed down the work and the project lost 361 days, thus adding to the economic woes of Uganda.

The strong possibility of losing their sovereignty has angered people in Africa, as people are criticising their governments and China. One Internet user called African leaders foolish. “You think the Chinese love Africans? Hahaha. Second slavery loading. The economic one,” said another.

Out of the 54 countries on the Africa continent, 50 have taken loans worth USD 153.4 billion from Chinese agencies between 2009 and 2019, according to the China Africa Research Initiative. Now, what has happened with Uganda rings alarm bells in poor African countries that are already reeling under shocks of COVID-19-led economic slump. Some African countries have experienced a commodity price crash and also they do not want to enter lending deals mortgaging their natural resources. All this has complicated debt servicing, putting these countries at the risk of losing vital infrastructure in case of loan defaults.

Kazim Yusuf is an international affairs analyst.

Source:

https://punchng.com/uganda-loss-of-international-airport-to-china/?utm_term=Autofeed&utm_medium=Social&utm_source=Facebook#Echobox=1638752601

Re: Uganda’s Loss Of International Airport To China - Punch. by Malory: 8:25am On Dec 06, 2021
This is the same fate that awaits Nigeria under the clueless and inept Buhari. By the time Buhari is done with Nigeria we will not even have a free air to breathe again. Buhari is evil

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Re: Uganda’s Loss Of International Airport To China - Punch. by BKayy: 8:26am On Dec 06, 2021
Lagos should start preparing.

If you are an indigene of Lagos or permanent resident, start teaching your children mandarin today.

Re: Uganda’s Loss Of International Airport To China - Punch. by joyandfaith: 8:27am On Dec 06, 2021
Borrowing billions of dollar to construct infrastructural facilities like airport , train that would only benefit allies does not make sense. There are so many basic infrastructures e.g health facilities, schools, road networks, electricity lacking in many African countries. Provision of these facilities would stimulate economy and improve lives. I believe loans should be for basic facilities that would benefit people directly.
We should stop coping developed nations. We need to develop our economy based on basic needs. Even China had to shut her door to develooed nations while growing their economy steadily and this initiative forced many factories to relocate to China.
African leaders need to look inward. Chinese loan is predatory while aid from West is form of neocolonialism.
Re: Uganda’s Loss Of International Airport To China - Punch. by Aufbauh(m): 8:29am On Dec 06, 2021
Unpatriotic kids will be looking the way of Nigeria ignorantly or mischievously.
Nigeria is way too big and strategic to be cut up by any debt backlash.

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Re: Uganda’s Loss Of International Airport To China - Punch. by Maxymilliano(m): 8:31am On Dec 06, 2021
Ugandan President, Yoweri Museveni, recently sent a delegation to Beijing to renegotiate the loans. However, the request was turned down as China refused to allow any alteration in the original terms of the loan agreement. This means Uganda is likely to forfeit the Entebbe International Airport that handles over 1.9 million passengers annually.
Hope our useless rubber stamped National assembly is seeing the handwriting of Buhari's borrowing from China? They should help him to read the terms and conditions of the agreement before borrowing since Buhari only read cartoon captions in newspapers.
Re: Uganda’s Loss Of International Airport To China - Punch. by BKayy: 8:35am On Dec 06, 2021
Maxymilliano:

Hope our useless rubber stamped National assembly is seeing the handwriting of Buhari's borrowing from China? They should help him to read the terms and conditions of the agreement before borrowing since Buhari only read cartoon captions in newspapers.
Nigeria is not a Nation.
Everybody in Nigeria owes their allegiance to their respective Nations and when it is not their own nation that will bear the consequences, they care less.

The ones scammed here is the Yoruba Nation so there is nothing your Senate/House of Assembly will do about that. If you bring it to voting, the North will outvote it.

So the Yorubas should concede defeat and think beyond Lagos. She is gone.
Re: Uganda’s Loss Of International Airport To China - Punch. by vedaxcool(m): 8:46am On Dec 06, 2021
Punch of lies and ethnic bigotry on the beat. China denied the story. Let's assume it is true, this is how this agreement works, the creditor would operate the asset till it fully recovers the debt and afterwards the debtor takes their property back.
Re: Uganda’s Loss Of International Airport To China - Punch. by Mynd44: 8:50am On Dec 06, 2021
8. Don't post false information on Nairaland.

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