PH seeks other bilateral partners after shunning aid from anti-drug war nations

MANILA – The Philippines is looking for other bilateral partners after it halted negotiations for loan agreements with 18 governments that supported the United Nations investigation into President Rodrigo Duterteā€™s war on drugs.

This is despite MalacaƱangā€™s earlier statement that rejecting loans and grants from those backing Icelandā€™s call for an inquiry into the drug war would have no effect on the economy.

Finance secretary Carlos Dominguez III has directed the agencyā€™s International Finance Group to review affected projects and find other sources of assistance, the Department of Finance (DOF) said Sunday.

ā€œWe are currently in exploratory talks with our other bilateral partners on how they can assist the Philippine government in funding the grants that were previously under negotiation but were suspended on orders of the President,ā€ he said in a statement.

Dominguez emphasized that MalacaƱangā€™s order to suspend negotiations of loan agreement ā€œdoes not mean a permanent cancellation of the talks.ā€

It only meant a deferment pending the assessment of the Philippinesā€™ relations with the 18 countries, which would be done by the Department of Foreign Affairs, according to the DOF.

The department said only a 21 million-euro ā€œsmall project loanā€ from France for the Metro Manila Bus Rapid Transit and a Germany-funded program worth 36 million United States dollars (USD) were affected.

The Philippines has found a substitution for Franceā€™s loan, while it was still looking for a donor for the German program, the DOF said.

Existing loans and grants with a total of USD197.03 million would not be affected by the Presidentā€™s orders, it added. 

Of this figure, USD172.4 million was from Australia, USD4.8 million from Italy, USD1.11 million from Spain, USD9.74 million from France, and USD8.98 million from Germany. (ABS-CBN News)

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