| source : staff | |||
| Monday, 14 July 2008 02:56 | |||
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Last June 3, the China National Machinery and Equipment Corp. Group sent a demand letter to North Luzon Railways Corporation (NLRC), saying that it would terminate the contract within 30 to 60 days if Northrail fails to take steps to comply with the terms of the contract and remedy several breaches of the original agreement. Among the breaches of contract mentioned in the June 3 letter obtained by ANC were: - failure to provide contractor access to the site and the necessary right of way; - failure to remove all residents living along the right of way and to dismantle and remove all obstacles including trees, shelter and building facilities; - failure to provide land to contractor for temporary use; - failure to approve the design document and technical specifications; - failure to make payments to the contractor; - failure to provide the diagram of existing undergound networks pertaining to the electricity, gas, water and sewerage facilities in the working area; - failure to compensate the contractor for extra costs; - failure to adjust the contract price. The letter was signed by Zhang Chun, director general for International Engineering Projects of CNMEG. The Arroyo administration entered into a deal with the Chinese government to build a railway connecting Manila to Northern Luzon. Phase 1 of the Northrail project would begin in Caloocan and stretch out to Clark, Pampanga. The $503 million project cost would be funded by the Chinese government through a loan and the construction would be undertaken by CNMEG. A separate letter sent by Ren Junan, CNMEG executive project manager, last May 13 to then NLRC president Arsenio Balisacan asked for a $299.4 million increase in the original contract price. The price adjustment includes $210,770,635 in "contractor's extra costs" and $88,634,975 for "variations of scope of works from the original contract." If approved, the price adjustment would inflate the project cost to more than $800 million. Balisacan resigned as NLRC president last June 1. He was replaced by Edgardo Pamintuan. ABS-CBN has learned that Chinese engineers had pulled out of the project as early as February. Residents living in the area say construction had been stopped months ago. "Meron dito mga Hapon yata na naghukay dito pero mukhang nagte-test lang. Tapos iniwan lang," said one resident. CNMEG said the cost of the project had gone up requiring them to ask for more money. Atty. Harry Roque, who has filed a case questioning the legality of the project, suspects that the cost overruns were due to kickbacks. "I don't understand why they need to double (the price). My only conclusion would be that they had to increase the price because there's no transparency and accountability and others still want to profit," he said in an interview on ANC's "News at 8." He added that this could mean that government will continue to spend millions of pesos servicing a debt for a project that may never be completed.
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