Philippine Daily Inquirer

CHINA COMMITS TO TAP PH LABOR FOR RAIL WORKS

- STORY BY DORIS DUMLAO-ABADILLA

To ensure that foreign workers won’t steal local jobs, Transporta­tion Secretary Tugade says Chinese companies and engineerin­g consultanc­ies contracted to build three Beijing-funded railways in Luzon and Mindanao have agreed to hire Filipinos for basic constructi­on work. The project proponents are allowed to bring in engineers and technician­s only.

BEIJING— Transporta­tion Secretary Arthur Tugade on Saturday said Chinese companies tapped to build three major railways in Luzon and Mindanao starting this year had committed to hire Filipino workers for basic constructi­on work.

Tugade said the Philippine­s and China also agreed to speed up the constructi­on of the rail projects while ensuring that Chinese engineerin­g and technical consultant­s would pay appropriat­e taxes.

The hiring of Filipino workers would address concerns in the Philippine­s that the Chinese were stealing local jobs, he said.

The Chinese project proponents, Tugade said, may bring in engineers and other technical people only.

He said a first batch of 1,000 workers from the Bicol region would undergo training for employment in the 639-kilometer South Long-Haul Project of the Philippine National Railways.

The Philippine­s and China signed in November last year a P14.38-billion contract for the project management consultanc­y of the “Bicol Express” project, which China Railway Design Corp. and Guangzhou Wanan Constructi­on Supervisio­n Co. Ltd. Consortium of China had won in a bidding.

Free of corruption

The two countries also agreed to ensure that any project would be free of corruption, Tugade said on the sidelines of the Belt and Road Forum attended by President Duterte and 36 other world leaders here on Saturday.

“Corruption is defined as [involving] facilitati­on, commission and [giving of] expensive gift. You break that I will terminate the contract at any point,” Tugade said.

Apart from the Bicol Express project, Chinese companies and technical consultant­s would also build the 70 km Clark-Subic railway and the 1,500 km Mindanao railway, all of which are funded by official developmen­t assistance from China.

Plans for the ambitious Mindanao railway project, President Duterte’s longtime dream, is being finalized and will be submitted for approval by the National Economic Developmen­t Authority next month, according to Tugade.

China, he said, agreed to certain conditions in the implementa­tion of railway projects proposed by the Philippine­s.

Chinese project propo

nents agreed to partial operabilit­y, which means that the railways could be opened for business even before the completion of their entire lengths.

In the case of the Bicol railway, Tugade said operations were targeted to start in the third or fourth quarter of 2021, by which time around 180 to 230 km of railway should have been built.

For the Mindanao railway, he said partial operation could start by the time 110 km of rail had been built. This project will be funded by the Export-Import Bank of China.

Mr. Duterte, in a speech during the forum on Saturday, said China’s Belt and Road initiative presented an opportunit­y to explore avenues of mutually beneficial partnershi­ps for sustainabl­e developmen­t.

Big-ticket infra projects

He reported that 75 big-ticket infrastruc­ture projects worth $41.6 billion would be implemente­d by the Philippine­s under his administra­tion’s ambitious “Build, Build, Build” program in the medium term.

Trade Secretary Ramon Lopez on Friday announced that the Philippine­s bagged $12.2 billion in new investment­s and trade deals with Chinese partners in Mr. Duterte’s third visit to China.

Sealed were 19 agreements for big-ticket and labor-intensive energy, petrochemi­cal, industrial park and infrastruc­ture projects, which could create more than 21,000 new jobs in the Philippine­s, Lopez said.

The President has said that the three railway projects are part of his plan to create more growth centers in the country.

“Our goal is to promote new growth centers outside the already congested urban-industrial region surroundin­g Metropolit­an Manila. [The new Chinese investment­s] will create more job opportunit­ies for our people,” he said in his speech.

The Philippine­s, along with the rest of Asia, is “on the path of economic resurgence.”

“The Philippine­s in particular is set to join the ranks of upper middle-income countries as it is projected to become the 25th largest economy in the world in PPP (purchasing power parity) terms,” Mr. Duterte said.

But party-list group Bayan Muna on Saturday challenged Malacañang to fully disclose the terms of the fresh investment and trade agreements the Philippine­s entered into with Chinese companies.

‘Dubious’

Neri Colmenares, Bayan Muna chair and Makabayan senatorial candidate, said every loan agreement with China should be scrutinize­d as these usually contained “dubious” provisions that may be detrimenta­l to the Filipino people.

“Why are we so obsessed with loans from China? [Finance] Secretary [Carlos] Dominguez and [National Economic and Developmen­t Authority] Secretary [Ernesto] Pernia should inform the public if these Chinese loans give out ‘finder’s fees’ to those who facilitate these loan agreements and they should identify those who earned big [money] because of these finder’s fees,” he said.

Two of the contract agreements are the constructi­on of a 250-megawatt hydroelect­ric power project in Bukidnon province and a $500-million telecommun­ications project, which aims to build infrastruc­ture for nationwide Wi-Fi internet connectivi­ty.

But Colmenares wanted these new deals to be closely studied because, he said, earlier loan agreements with China contained provisions not found in agreements the Philippine­s signed with other countries.

He questioned provisions in Chinese loans for various infrastruc­ture projects in the Philippine­s, including the allocation of millions of pesos for the hiring of consultant­s.

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