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Genting blames German state after shipbuilder's collapse by AFP Staff Writers Frankfurt (AFP) Jan 11, 2022 Asian tourism and casino group Genting accused a German state of failing to pay out money promised as part of a rescue plan for its now-insolvent shipbuilding subsidiary MV Werften. Negotiators for Mecklenburg-West Pomerania "presented a mechanism that hid the political motivation", lawyers representing the group's Genting Hong Kong unit told a state court in Schwerin, Germany, a day after MV Werften filed for bankruptcy. The company took Mecklenburg-West Pomerania to court in December for the payment of $88 million (78 million euros). The money Genting HK claimed dates back to an agreement with the government in June to provide a bridging loan for the struggling dockyard operation on the Baltic coast. A ruling in the case is expected shortly. According to Genting, the state linked the payment to conditions that were not in the original contract, including increasing Genting's own contribution to the rescue package from 30 million to 60 million euros. Lawyers representing Mecklenburg-West Pomerania rejected the suggestion the state had a political motivation, saying it was required under its budget law to closely examine the loans it made. The state also said that the June agreement extended a credit line of up to 148 million euros, while the shipbuilder's funding gap had risen to 600 million euros. The shipbuilder MV Werften, which employs around 2,000 people across three dockyards, filed for bankruptcy on Monday after failing to secure funding for the completion of the "Global One" cruise ship. Until recently the company was engaged in negotiations with stated and federal government to try and reach an agreement on a financial support package to finish the mega-liner, 80 percent built up to now. Economy and Climate Minister Robert Habeck said on Monday that the government had "pulled out all the stops" to avoid MV Werften filing for bankruptcy. The region was looking at options to support the "continued operation" of the site and "the future of the employees", local economy minister Reinhard Meyer said in a statement on Monday.
Philippines to buy two new South Korean warships for $556M Manila (AFP) Dec 28, 2021 The Philippines has ordered two new warships from South Korea's Hyundai Heavy Industries, Defence Secretary Delfin Lorenzana said Tuesday, modernising Manila's navy as it faces a dispute with Beijing in the South China Sea. The Philippine Navy had become run down in recent decades - even featuring US craft from World War II - until President Rodrigo Duterte's predecessor, Benigno Aquino, began a modest modernisation programme in 2010. Tuesday's 28 billion pesos ($556 million) deal with the Sou ... read more
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