When China signed up to build Venezuela’s
Tinaco-Anaco Railway in 2009, the scheme was hailed as proof of the
effectiveness of socialist brotherhood. Gleaming new Chinese trains were
envisaged, whisking passengers and cargo along at 137mph on about 300 miles of
track. Hugo Chávez, the late Venezuelan president, called the $800m project
“socialism on rails” and said the air-conditioned carriages would be available
to everyone, rich or poor. But the endeavour has become what locals call a “red
elephant”, the vandalised and abandoned symbol of Venezuela’s deepening
economic crisis. A slogan written in Chinese characters on an archway into a
deserted construction site has taken on an ironic tone. “Dare to leap ahead,”
it says More…Friday, October 14, 2016
China rethinks developing world largesse as deals sour
When China signed up to build Venezuela’s
Tinaco-Anaco Railway in 2009, the scheme was hailed as proof of the
effectiveness of socialist brotherhood. Gleaming new Chinese trains were
envisaged, whisking passengers and cargo along at 137mph on about 300 miles of
track. Hugo Chávez, the late Venezuelan president, called the $800m project
“socialism on rails” and said the air-conditioned carriages would be available
to everyone, rich or poor. But the endeavour has become what locals call a “red
elephant”, the vandalised and abandoned symbol of Venezuela’s deepening
economic crisis. A slogan written in Chinese characters on an archway into a
deserted construction site has taken on an ironic tone. “Dare to leap ahead,”
it says More…
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