Nigeria’s Loans From China Rise To $3.59bn, Says Debt Office

2 years ago
1 min read

The Debt Management Office (DMO) has clarified that loans from China to Nigeria, which presently stand at $3.59bn, constitute 9.4 per cent of the country’s total foreign debt stock of $37.9bn.

The Director-General of DMO, Ms Patience Oniha, who made this known in Abuja, clarified that the loans were largely concessional, as no national asset was tagged as collateral.

In recent times, both the social and mainstream media have been awash with news about some African countries, including Nigeria, facing the threat of losing some critical national assets to the Asian country due to high-level indebtedness.

“Nigeria’s total debt stock as at September 30 was $37.9bn; this figure comprised the external debt stock of the Federal Government, 36 state governments and the Federal Capital Territory.

“ But total loans from China stand at 3.59 billion dollars, which is 9.47 per cent of the total external debt. The loans did not require any national asset as collateral; they were largely concessional,’’ she said.

Oniha urged Nigerians to always endeavour to verify sensitive information from official sources before disseminating it.

She explained that, before foreign loans were contracted, very sensitive steps were taken by multiple institutions of government to ensure that they were beneficial to Nigeria.

In her words, “Before any foreign loan is contracted, including issuance of Eurobond, they are approved by the Federal Executive Council and, thereafter, the National Assembly.

“An important and extremely critical step is that the loan agreements are approved by the Federal Ministry of Justice.

“An opinion is issued by the Attorney-General of the Federation and Minister of Justice before the agreements are signed.

“Several measures which operate seamlessly have been put in place to ensure that data on debt are available and that debt is serviced as at when due. Provisions are made explicitly for debt service in the annual budgets,’’ she added.


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