Sri Lanka is considering a US$300 million loan offer from the Bank of China as it prepares to repay foreign debts this year, Sri Lankan Ministry of Finance spokesman M.R. Hasan said on Wednesday.
The Sri Lankan government has appointed a three-member committee to negotiate the deal, Hasan said.
The loan is repayable in three years, he said.
Sri Lanka must repay US$5.9 billion in foreign loans this year, of which 40 percent needs to be serviced during the first three months. It paid back US$1 billion this week.
A large chunk of Sri Lanka’s foreign debt is from China, which considers the island nation a part of its Belt and Road Initiative.
China has heavily invested in Sri Lanka infrastructure, such as a seaport, airport and highways. It has poured US$1.5 billion into a port city being built on reclaimed land off the island’s west coast.
Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena’s government had criticized the previous administration for leading the country into a Chinese debt trap by allowing unsolicited projects at high commercial interest rates.
However, it has retracted its opposition to Chinese projects owing to economic pressures.
The seaport and airport generate little revenue, despite their high maintenance cost, and Sri Lanka has leased out the seaport to a joint Chinese-Sri Lankan venture, with Beijing holding a major share.
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