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USD 150 million Chinese funding for Uganda since World Bank Halted all New Lending

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Uganda is preparing to borrow $150 million from China’s Export-Import Bank (EXIM) to help expand its internet infrastructure, stated the Ugandan finance ministry.

Uganda is preparing to borrow $150 million from China’s Export-Import Bank (EXIM) to help expand its internet infrastructure, stated the Ugandan finance ministry. The move underscores the East African country’s increasing reliance for credit on Chinese lenders after the World Bank halted all new lending to Uganda earlier this year in protest at a new anti-homosexuality law. A junior finance minister and the minister for information asked lawmakers to authorise the debt. The money is to finance the supply, installation, commissioning, and support of the national data transmission backbone infrastructure.

Uganda is also negotiating with Chinese export credit agency SINOSURE and Exim Bank for a loan to finance the construction of a pipeline to help Uganda export its crude oil to international markets.

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The World Bank, traditionally Uganda’s biggest development lender, halted loans to Uganda after President Yoweri Museveni signed the Anti-Homosexuality Act which hands out tough sentences including death for a range of homosexual activities.