Myanmar seeks resumption of infrastructure projects with China (23 DEC)
The Myanmar government is looking to
restart development and infrastructure projects with China, as well as accelerating bilateral economic and technical cooperation with its close neighbor, according to an announcement released by the Ministry of Information of the Republic of the Union of Myanmar on Tuesday.
"Due to the coronavirus epidemic, sanctions from the West and its delicate relations with the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN),
Myanmar wants to resume infrastructure projects with China to overcome its economic difficulties, as they are suited to the current needs of the country," Xu Liping, Director of the Center for Southeast Asian Studies at the Chinese Academy of Social Sciences in Beijing, told the Global Times on Thursday.
Sources close to the matter told the Global Times that
Myanmar will include the yuan in its official settlement currency for border trade with China with a targeted pilot settlement scheme set at around
2 billion yuan ($314 million).
According to the announcement, Myanmar's State Administration Council (SAC) has reviewed a list of 97 projects that were proposed by the previous government in late 2020 in response to the China's offer of 4 billion yuan ($627 million) in development assistance to Myanmar.
The SAC also reviewed 15 projects under a separate 200 million yuan ($31 million) grant from China, which will contribute to the success of the
China-Myanmar Economic Corridor (CMEC). The CMEC, under the Belt and Road Initiative, includes road and rail infrastructure
stretching 1,700 kilometers, from Kunming in Southwest China's Yunnan Province, through several regions in Myanmar to Kyaukpyu along the Bay of Bengal, a site of a proposed Special Economic Zone Deep Sea Project which is of special significance for economic cooperation between the two countries.
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