By Francesco Guarascio
(Reuters) – Cambodia is betting on more financial support from China, including for infrastructure, as President Xi Jinping visits the country on Thursday at the end of a three-nation trip in Southeast Asia, a Cambodian government spokesman said.
The country, which is a major exporter of clothing and footwear to the United States, was hit with a 49% “reciprocal” tariff by U.S. President Donald Trump, one of the highest rates globally, before most duties were paused until July.
Phnom Penh is also a close partner of China, which has invested billions of dollars in projects including roads and airports, and is the country’s largest creditor.
“We expect more cooperation including on infrastructure development,” Meas Soksensan, spokesman for the Cambodian finance ministry, told Reuters on the eve of Xi’s arrival in Phnom Penh.
He was answering a question about whether Cambodia expected Beijing to announce financial support for a 180 km (111.85 miles) canal, which is the country’s most ambitious infrastructure project.
The Cambodian government has said China would pay for the Funan Techo Canal, which would run from the Mekong River, from a site near Phnom Penh, to the coast on the Gulf of Thailand, diverting water from the fragile rice-growing Mekong Delta and reducing Cambodian shipping through Vietnamese ports.
China has so far made no public financial commitment on the project, while Phnom Penh has changed its statements on Chinese engagement from covering 100% to 49% of total costs, estimated at $1.7 billion, nearly 4% of Cambodia’s annual gross domestic product.
Xi’s visit to Cambodia is part of a long-planned trip that has been seen as a charm offensive in Southeast Asia, one of the regions hardest-hit by U.S. tariffs. He earlier visited Malaysia and Vietnam, which has expressed misgivings about the Funan Techo canal.
Beijing signed no new loans to Cambodia last year, according to official data from the Cambodian government, a marked contrast with previous years when it lent the country hundreds of millions of dollars.
The drop in funding came as China reduced overall overseas investments amid domestic economic woes and concerns over unsuccessful projects.
China and Cambodia have repeatedly said they are “ironclad” friends, despite recent tensions over scam centres in Cambodia that are often run by Chinese gangs and target Chinese nationals, either as victims or captive workers.
Before Xi’s arrival, Cambodia said it had deported to China a number of “Chinese criminals”, including people from Taiwan, in a move that angered Taipei.
Earlier in April, the two countries held joint military exercises at a newly expanded naval base on the Cambodian coast, a facility the United States worries could become a Chinese military outpost.
(Reporting by Francesco Guarascio; Editing by John Mair and Kate Mayberry)
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