Financial Times FT.com

China gains a foothold in Russia’s backyard

By Louis O’Neill

Published: July 28 2009 22:00 | Last updated: July 28 2009 22:00

A week before Wednesday’s repeat parliamentary elections in Moldova, China signed an agreement to loan $1bn (£600m, €700m) to this cash-strapped, resource-poor country, nearly tripling Moldova’s external debt and issuing a direct challenge to the US and Russia for economic and political influence in this last outpost of elected Communist rule in the former Soviet Union.

Beijing’s move comes after Russia’s recent agreement-in-principle to loan $500m to Moldova and as payments from the US Millennium Challenge Account have yet to reach $25m. The Chinese loan is double the planned Russian credit and beats by $300m the maximum that the MCA could offer. Moreover, the Chinese terms are highly favourable: a 3 per cent annual rate over 15 years with a five-year grace period on interest payments, and no human rights strings attached.

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