Fiji, Japan sign emergency loan agreement
SUVA, Feb. 22 (Xinhua) -- Fiji and Japan signed here on Monday an emergency loan agreement, which will allow Fiji to get the 200 million Fijian dollars (about 98.98 million U.S. dollars) loan from Japan.
According to a statement from the Fijian government, during the signing ceremony, Fijian Prime Minister Voreqe Bainimarama said that the best way to build resilience over the long-term is to bring Fiji's COVID-stricken economy fully back to life and this loan will allow the island nation to further strengthen its COVID defences, particularly its public health systems.
The loan, which is the largest in Japan's loan history of aid and assistance to Fiji, comes with concessions such as a 0.01 percent interest rate and 15 years of repayment period with 4 years grace period.
COVID-19 has seriously impacted upon Fiji's economy which contracted by 19 percent last year.
Fiji has had 56 cases in total, with 54 recoveries and 2 deaths, since its first case was reported on March 19 last year. The last 38 cases have been international travel associated cases detected in border quarantine.
Currently, Fiji still maintains a strict travel restriction for foreign visitors alongside a nationwide curfew effective from March 30 last year.
[ Editor: WPY ]
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