Paris Club diplomacy mission accomplished: Indonesian FM
18/1/2005 15:06
Indonesian Minister of Foreign Affairs Hassan Wirayuda has said his team had
accomplished its mission to negotiate debt relief in last week's Paris Club
meeting as well as mobilizing support for grants and debt swaps. The team met
with leaders from four countries of the United Kingdom, France, Germany and
Italy prior to the forum. "We (Indonesia and the four European countries) not
only talked about a debt moratorium, we also discussed wider schemes that were
proposed (by analysts, experts) in Indonesia," Hassan was quoted Tuesday by The
Jakarta Post newspaper as saying. "We reached an understanding that we would
follow up our discussion on the moratorium. At this point, I thought it was not
realistic to talk about the amount of the debt moratorium and so on. In the end,
the amount would depend on the World Bank's assessment, although we agreed on
terms and conditions for the moratorium." Nineteen creditor countries grouped
in the Paris Club announced an immediate debt repayment reprieve for countries
devastated by the recent Asian tsunami disaster, including Indonesia, pending a
full assessment from the World Bank and the International Monetary Fund on their
reconstruction and financing needs, scheduled to be completed in three months.
The Paris Club will consider the necessary steps after that. Criticism has
been leveled at the delegation, saying it failed in diplomatic efforts and that
the government had not asked for enough debt relief to rebuild Aceh. Hassan
said Germany, France and Italy agreed on debt swaps or an increase in their
grants. Germany has offered 500 million euros (US$650 million) to affected
countries, comprising of grants and soft loans. German is considering raising
the percentage of their grants, he added. Italy has agreed to convert 30
million euros of Indonesia's debt this year to finance certain projects --
including the reconstruction of Aceh. "Italy also offered the same amount to be
converted in 2006," Hassan said. France has offered 300 million euros in soft
loans with 1 percent interest with a 10-year grace period. The donor country
refused to convert the loan into a grant since it had to revise its annual
budget. "But one third of the loans will be in effect a grant," Hassan
said. He added that the European Union was considering granting a tariff
reduction and lifting trade barriers for certain goods from Indonesia. The EU
will make the decision on July 1 and Minister of Trade Mari Elka Pangestu will
hold a discussion with related EU ministries. "France has supported the
special treatment for Indonesian textiles and is willing to consider other
commodities like shrimp and fish products," Hassan said. He also said that
Germany would help Indonesia develop a tsunami early warning system across the
archipelago, apart from the planned system in the Indian Ocean, by sending its
geologists to an international conference on early warning systems in Indonesia
next month.
Xinhua
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