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   Sri Lankan PM says Chinese port project ‘not a threat’

Sri Lankan PM says Chinese port project ‘not a threat’

AFP
Published : Apr 10, 2016, 10:07 am IST
Updated : Apr 10, 2016, 10:07 am IST

Sri Lanka’s president suspended Port City plan after taking power in Jan last year, before recommending last month that it be resumed.

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Sri Lanka’s president suspended Port City plan after taking power in Jan last year, before recommending last month that it be resumed.

Hong Kong:

A port project being built in Colombo by the Chinese is not a threat, Sri Lanka’s prime minister said Saturday amid concerns Beijing is trying to boost its influence in the Indian Ocean.

The $1.4 billion “Port City” represents the biggest single foreign investment received by the island, adding 233 hectares (575 acres) of real estate in the congested capital.

But it is controversial, as Beijing has been accused of seeking to develop facilities around the region in a “String of Pearls” strategy to counter the rise of rival India and to secure its own economic interests.

“The Port City is not a threat to anyone, it’s an opportunity for everyone to make money,” Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe told a news conference. “The Chinese have not asked for any military base in Sri Lanka.”

Wickremesinghe described Sri Lanka as a “small country” before adding: “Sri Lanka will not allow in any way the security of other countries to be threatened by third parties. Sri Lanka is committed to the freedom of navigation in the Indian Ocean.”

The mega project was initiated by Chinese President Xi Jinping in September 2014 and is expected to include real estate, a marina and a Formula One racetrack.

Wickremesinghe made the comments on the final day of his visit to the Asian giant, where he is seeking to restructure some of the cash-strapped island’s $8 billion Chinese debt and convert some of its loan burden into stakes in infrastructure projects.

Sri Lanka’s president suspended the Port City plan shortly after taking power in January last year, before recommending last month that it be resumed.

Former president Mahinda Rajapakse, who is under investigation over allegations of corruption during his decade in power, relied heavily on China to rebuild the country’s infrastructure after the end of the island’s decades-long ethnic war in May 2009.

The present administration has accused the previous government of agreeing to unfavourable terms for the loans.

China, the largest single lender to the island, secured contracts to build roads, railways and ports under Rajapakse’s regime.

Location: Hong Kong