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Uganda negotiates debt finance for 85% planned $3 billion rail project

A senior official revealed on Wednesday that Uganda was in discussions with credit export agencies and development finance institutions to have 85% a planned rail project funded with debt. This is due to concerns about the already high public debt.

In October of last year, Turkey's Yapi Merkezi was awarded the contract for the construction of the 2.7 billion euro ($3.15 billion) rail. Preliminary works have already begun.

Perez Wamburu said that some of the potential financiers are the OPEC Fund for International Development (FIDA), the Africa Development Bank, the Islamic Development Bank, and some European export credit companies.

Wamburu stated that the debt financing discussions were at an advanced stage and are expected to be concluded soon.

He said: "The potential financiers are readily available... The Finance Ministry is actively engaging with them, and financial closure should come soon."

Wamburu, the Ugandan minister of finance, said that the government has allocated $75 million for funding preliminary work and will fund 15%.

The 272-kilometre line (169-miles) is the first segment of a planned 1,700 km rail line for the landlocked country in east Africa.

The railway will connect the Kenyan border at Malaba with Uganda's capital Kampala. Reporting by Elias Biryabarema, Editing by George Obulutsa & Bernadette Baum. $1 = 0.8580 euro

(source: Reuters)