The Entebbe International Airport is now reportedly directly taken over by China due to loan default. The only International airport of Uganda, which serves at least 1.9 passengers every year, is the latest victim of China's loan trap.
Hihi, so they get almost a crew flying once from that airport?
Guess you missed a million or something from that.
Anyhow in this case, if the number of passengers is indeed below 6k a day they are better of giving it to the Chinese even for free, at this low traffic every airport is losing money and needs government subsidies, so Chinese investors will actually have to bear more costs with this one, slap them with taxes for the land and they will give it back for free.
When it comes to the IMF, do you think El Salvador should have accepted their help instead of choosing Bitcoin? If those countries had invested wisely in the past, today they would have no problem - but many African countries have deliberately fallen into the trap of borrowing money from China, because most of the money ended up in private pockets anyway - I’m sure politicians in Uganda don’t cry for the fact that China took over their airport because they certainly benefited from it.
Hihi, Salvador is no exception:
https://www.scmp.com/news/world/americas/article/3134008/el-salvadors-president-plays-china-ties-after-us-corruptionOn Tuesday night, El Salvador’s Congress ratified a cooperation agreement with China, which had been signed back in 2019. The agreement calls for about US$62 million in investment in a water purification plant, a stadium, a library, and infrastructure along Salvador’s coast.
Beijing then drafted a document describing plans to build a special administrative zone and requested a 100-year lease of a 1,076-square-mile area. The zone was set to be created by Asia Pacific Xuan Hao, which is a Chinese state-owned company that manufactures, amongst other things, laser pointers, laser glare series, sound wave series and private satellite networks. The company initially cited a close relationship with the Chinese military, but removed references to this after Salvadoran media reported on it.
Aside from the port in La Union, Chinese investors also turned their attention to Isla Perico, a nearby island which could become part of a larger port infrastructure project. A vision of creating a commercial trading hub on the island was scrapped, however, when locals vociferously opposed it. Bo Yang, a Chinese-Salvadoran businessman and Vice President of the China – El Salvador Chamber of Commerce, nevertheless bought up part of the island in November 2019