YANGON,
Nov 2: The World Bank will inject $245 million of aid into Myanmar to
support its reform drive, resuming assistance for the former pariah
nation after a quarter-century absence, officials said Friday. The Bank
has earmarked $80 million for a grant and $165 million for a no-interest
loan for poverty alleviation schemes, including microfinance, according
to the bank’s office in Yangon. Infrastructure projects in villages in
rural areas would be among the beneficiaries, the bank said after its
board of directors in Washington approved a new strategy for helping the
former junta-ruled country.
“We want the people of Myanmar and the poor in particular to see the reform can lead to real benefits,” said Kanthan Shankar, the World Bank’s country manager for Myanmar.
“We are here to help Myanmar reduce poverty by strengthening institutions... supporting projects for the poor,” he added, citing building the capacity of banks and providing funds for microfinance and infrastructure as priorities.
Despite rich natural resources, almost one-third of Myanmar’s population lives below the poverty line, according to the World Bank.
The Washington-based institution closed its Yangon office in 1987 and ceased new lending
after the then-ruling junta stopped making payments on debts worth
hundreds of millions of dollars left from previous programmes.
A hurdle for the resumption of aid has been how to deal with the unpaid money, including arrears of almost $400 million owed to the World Bank.
The Bank, which opened a new office in Yangon in August, said Friday that it was working with Japan and the Asian Development Bank to resolve the issue and expected to clear the arrears in early 2013.
Myanmar
President Thein Sein has overseen a series of dramatic reforms since
taking office last year, including the release of political prisoners
and the election of Nobel Peace Prize winner Aung San Suu Kyi to
parliament.
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