Malaysia cancels $20 bn China-backed rail project

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has cancelled a $20 bn rail project being built and financed by after failed attempts to lower the price, a said on Saturday.

The project was being built by Communications Construction Company (CCCC) and was 85 per cent financed by

The cancellation of the mega project is the second by the government since it came to power in May last year. In August, his government cancelled a China-backed project, a in the East state of Sabah.

Azmin Ali, briefing reporters on the latest cancellation, said: "The cabinet decided to scrap the project because the cost of development is too high, and we do not have the financial capability at the moment."

When it was awarded to CCCC in 2016 by Mahathir's now-deposed predecessor Najib Razak, observers hailed it as one of the cornerstones of Xi Jinping's Belt and Road Initiative.

The ECRL is meant to be a land bridge linking with that would allow shipped cargo to bypass

"If this project is not cancelled, the interest rates that will need to be paid by the government is almost half a billion ringgit (US$121 million)," he said. "We cannot bear this right now, therefore the project needs to be cancelled without affecting our good relations with China. We still welcome all forms of investment from China but we will look into the matter on a case-by-case basis."

He said the amount expected to be compensated to (CCCC) will be decided by the

Upon his shock election victory in May last year, the 93-year-old identified the ECRL as one of several big-ticket China-linked infrastructure projects he planned to cancel because he felt they were too expensive and unnecessary.

Najib, who offered the project without tender, has repeatedly said the would be making a mistake by cancelling the deal.

According to the former leader, the terms offered by the are highly competitive, with an interest rate of 3.25 per cent protected from exchange rate fluctuations and a seven-year deferment on payments.

Mahathir's Pakatan Harapan bloc believes Najib, now facing dozens of criminal charges for his alleged role in the multibillion dollar 1MDB scandal, endorsed Beijing-linked projects because of his enthusiasm to take the country closer to the Asian superpower.

Reviewing Chinese-linked projects was one of 10 things the promised to do within the first 100 days of coming to power last year.

Following Mahathir's meeting with Xi in last year, the said he had the assent of the to review the projects, which the said he understood needed to do.

(This story has not been edited by Business Standard staff and is auto-generated from a syndicated feed.)

First Published: Sat, January 26 2019. 08:13 IST