Vietnamese funding curbs will not delay hospital development

May 7th at 10:38
07-05-2014 10:38:26+07:00

Vietnamese funding curbs will not delay hospital development

Despite Vietnamese state-owned companies withdrawing funding from projects outside of their core business, the $20 million expansion of the Vietnamese-backed Cho Ray Phnom Penh Hospital remains on track, the hospital’s head said yesterday.

In July 2012 the Vietnamese government requested that state-owned enterprises withdraw investment in non-core business fields prior to 2015. Reports from Vietnamese media last week cited Cho Ray Phnom Penh Hospital as a project to be affected by the funding curbs.

The hospital’s key investor, Ho Chi Minh City Medical Investment Joint Stock Company (MECO), is under funding pressure from its shareholder companies whose main business interests lay outside of health investment, according to an April 28 report from the Saigon Times.

Nguyen Hoang Nam, general director of Cho Ray Phnom Penh told the Post yesterday that he met with both MECO and local investor Sokimex last week and was advised that the second phase of development, which will see the hospital grow by an additional 300 beds, would be fully funded.

“The plan is still the same, nothing has changed,” Hoang Nam said.

“Both partners have agreed that we will start the second phase.”

Tran Manh Tiep, Second Secretary at the Vietnamese Embassy confirmed his governments investment directive on Monday, but declined to comment on the extent to which the order would impact Cambodian projects.

“Here is the problem to be solved,” he said in an email.

With an initial investment of $42 million, construction of Cho Ray Hospital commenced in 2010 and began operating in January this year with 200 beds.

Commencement of the second phase of the project to expand to 500 beds is expected to be announced shortly, the hospital’s general director said yesterday.

phnompenh post



NEWS SAME CATEGORY

Tourism numbers up in first quarter

The number of foreign tourists visiting Cambodia reached 1.2 million in the first three months of the year, an 8.2 per cent increase compared with the same period...

Work begins on mega resort

Construction began yesterday on the Sokha Hotel Group’s 600-room luxury resort in Siem Reap – right next door to Angkor Wat.

Port volume on the rise in Q1

Cargo volumes at Cambodia’s two largest ports increased steadily during the first three months of the year, signalling stability in the Kingdom’s economy, port...

Aeon reports record revenue amid ASEAN expansion

Aeon Co, the Japanese firm developing the soon-to-be-opened Aeon Mall on Phnom Penh’s Sothearos Boulevard, has reported a record $62.3 billion in revenue for its...

Mechanics school on the way

A new auto-mechanics training school at the National Polytechnic Institute of Cambodia (NPI) that aims to train select Cambodian youth and support a shortage in the...

PM to open investment conference

Prime Minister Hun Sen will open Cambodia’s International Investment Conference in Phnom Penh later this year, the International Business Chamber of Cambodia (IBC)...

Casino owner’s woes persist

The share price of Cambodian casino owner Entertainment Gaming Asia has fallen below the minimum requirement of the Nasdaq Stock Market, threatening the gaming...

AEON tenants target Cambodia’s middle class

An ice-skating rink, bowling alley, seven-screen cinema and a proverbial catwalk of high-end European and US labels will start vying for a slice of Cambodia’s...

No scheme in place for congestion near AEON

Despite expecting 27,000 visitors per day, little planning has gone into tackling traffic congestion at Cambodia’s long-awaited AEON Mall when it opens June 30...

Trade deficit prompts call to diversify exports

Cambodia's trade deficit expanded to almost half a billion dollars during the first three months of the year, according to the latest figures from the Ministry of...


MOST READ


Back To Top