MANILA: The Asian Development Bank has announced to give the Philippines $3 billion loan for the next three years, which may help decrease insurgency in the country.
As per the statement issued jointly with the Philippine government, the loan – up 66 percent from the $1.8 billion agreed for 2015-2017 – will help the Philippines build roads and other infrastructure, improve its basic education system and reform its capital markets.
Bank president Takehiko Nakao said boosting lending to the country was in part aimed at “supporting the government in its effort to bring lasting peace and development” to the Catholic nation’s Muslim south. His comments come after a peace deal was struck in March last year with the country’s largest Parliament is currently debating a proposed law to grant minority Muslims self-rule in the violence-racked area, which President Aquino hopes will be passed before next year.
The government also plans to pour large amounts of aid to the region, and the ADB said it is now working with local authorities to prepare a development plan.
The bank will also help the government raise adult literacy and improve job prospects for residents there, the statement added.
The rebellion, which began in the early 1970s, has plunged the region into widespread poverty with poor infrastructure like rutted roads, rudimentary ports, and schools destroyed due to intermittent fighting between government forces and communist guerrillas.
Rebuilding basic infrastructure, as well as improving literacy levels, would help the region attract business investment necessary to create jobs to help its people get out of poverty.