I appreciate that answer.
Let me give you some other examples that have happened.
In 2020, a number of non-governmental organizations accused the AIIB of violating human rights and environmental standards in India when 103 families were forcibly moved to make way for a metro rail project funded by the AIIB.
In the same year, similar allegations about a lack of environmental standards were made with respect to an AIIB project funded in Bangladesh. This was the Bhola power plant, where a flood occurred and a number of workers died.
A year later, the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights stated that human rights had been violated in Indonesia's Mandalika tourism project, which was also funded by the AIIB, particularly with the forced displacement of people and forced resettlement.
More recently, civil society organizations have alleged that there are predatory and abusive collection practices with regard to a microfinancing project in Cambodia that the AIIB funded.
With all these projects, there seems to be a pattern emerging about a different style of governance compared with that of multilateral organizations and development banks such as the World Bank.
In all these cases, how can that kind of funding of those kinds of projects be consistent with the government's stated foreign policy priorities?