The government of cash-strapped Vanuatu will soon settle into a suite of new buildings funded by China, a move likely to reignite concerns about Beijing’s reach in the South Pacific nation.
At an official handover ceremony conducted in front of a towering China Aid billboard, Vanuatu Prime Minister Charlot Salwai announced the opening of the nation’s sweeping new presidential palace.
The project also included the construction of a new finance ministry and renovations to Vanuatu’s foreign affairs department, China’s embassy said in a statement released Tuesday.
Australia’s Lowy Institute think tank estimated China had spent upwards of $21 million on construction, a significant sum for an aid project in the developing nation of less than 300,000 people.
China’s embassy said the project had gifted Vanuatu “another landmark building,” while symbolizing a new “milestone” in their increasingly warm relationship.
A Chinese delegation handed Salwai an oversized novelty golden key — also emblazoned with “China Aid” — kicking off a festive opening ceremony replete with Chinese dragon dancers and the brewing of the ceremonial kava drink.
Local media reported that hundreds of public servants would work, rent-free, inside the new buildings.
Vanuatu is heavily indebted to China: about 40 percent of its external debt is owed to China’s Exim bank, according to the Lowy Institute.
China has funded a swathe of major infrastructure upgrades across the archipelago, part of an intensifying scramble for influence pitting Beijing against Western rivals.
Beijing’s ambassador to Vanuatu, Li Minggang, has said that China is ready and willing to “step up pragmatic cooperation in this field.”
But there are fears that Vanuatu and other Pacific states such as Tonga and Solomon Islands are increasingly vulnerable to what critics have described as China’s “debt-trap diplomacy.”