China today expressed regret and called for fair treatment of its firms, days after Mexico abruptly scrapped a USD 3.7 billion high-speed rail contract awarded to a Chinese consortium over alleged irregularities.
Premier Li Keqiang expressed his regret to Mexican President Enrique Pena Nieto, who was in Beijing to attend the two-day Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation (APEC) meeting.
He asked the Mexican government to "fairly" treat Chinese enterprises investing in the country, state-run Xinhua news agency reported.
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Mexico's Ministry of Communications and Transport last week announced it will annul the deal due to public concerns about the bidding process.
A consortium of Chinese and Mexican companies led by the CRCC had won the bid to build a 210-kilometre-long high-speed railway connecting Mexico City with the industrial hub of Queretaro to the north.
Mexico's Ministry of Communications and Transport has said Nieto's decision to scrap the deal was aimed at clearing any public doubts about the project.
The CRCC has stressed that the firm has strictly followed the bidding procedures and requirements, and the bidding content complied with the requirements of the Mexican government.
The Chinese-led group was the only one to bid by the October 15 deadline.
Construction of the rail line, part of Mexico government's plan to boost Latin America's second-biggest economy, was due to start in December, with services running from 2017.
Mexico would become the first Latin American nation to have a bullet train after Brazil and Argentina postponed their own high-speed rail projects.