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Sri Lanka builds on Chinese support

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Sri Lanka builds on Chinese support
By Joe Leahy in Hambantota

Published: May 20 2010 12:19 | Last updated: May 20 2010 12:19

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Hambantota Port under construction

At Hambantota, a remote fishing town on Sri Lanka’s south coast, Chinese engineers are digging a channel through the region’s pristine beaches, connecting the Indian Ocean with a vast inland pit, whose soaring concrete walls dwarf the earth-moving equipment working below.

Next year, the project managers will fill this man-made crater with water, creating the first phase of a new international harbour that will service the passing ships of the oil trade between east Asia and the Middle East.


“There are a lot of local crowds who come to see this,” says an official guide, who takes tourists to a vantage point where Mahinda Rajapaksa, Sri Lanka’s president, is pictured standing alongside Wen Jiabao, the Chinese premier.

The port is the brainchild of Mr Rajapaksa, whose family constituency is in Hambantota. But while the public sees the harbour as an engineering wonder, analysts view it as a symbol of the growing relationship between Colombo and Beijing, which lent $360m for the first phase of the project.

As Mr Rajapaksa this week celebrates Colombo’s victory a year ago over the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam separatist group, these construction works are a reminder of how much he owes his success to Beijing.

The moustachioed ruler, known for his trademark maroon shawl and traditional dress, won a second term this year on the back of his victory over the Tamil Tigers, for which China provided munitions, and by wooing voters with promises of big-ticket infrastructure projects, many of which are again to be backed by China.

“In the last one year since the end of the war, China has been trying to jump in and seize more opportunities in Sri Lanka,” said Brahma Chellaney, professor of strategic studies at the Centre for Policy Research, a New Delhi think tank.

China was Sri Lanka’s biggest source of foreign funding in 2009, providing $1.2bn, or nearly triple the $424m given by the number two overseas lender, the Asian Development Bank.

Aside from Hambantota’s port, projects include a coal-fired power plant, an oil bunkering facility and a performing arts centre in Colombo. In March, China pledged another $290m for a new airport and to upgrade the island’s railways.

Mr Rajapaksa, who once acted in Sinhalese films, has become reliant on China for diplomatic support. Beijing helped thwart western calls last year for a UN probe into allegations of human rights violations during the war.

For Beijing, the partnership with Sri Lanka offers secure access to the Indian Ocean through which most of China's oil passes. Some suspect the island could one day serve Beijing as a de facto navy base.

“If China is to emerge as the pre-eminent power in Asia, unchallenged by Japan and India, then China has to be the dominant force in the Indian Ocean region,” said Mr Chellaney.

Big infrastructure projects come at a price. Sri Lanka’s fiscal deficit blew out to nearly 10 per cent of gross domestic product in the 2009 fiscal year compared with a target of 7 per cent, amid soaring public debt.

This led the International Monetary Fund to postpone in February the third tranche of a $2.6bn loan programme. The delay has not sparked a crisis – the government has adequate foreign exchange reserves and the central bank expects the economy to grow 6.5 per cent this year.

But opposition politicians say the IMF's tight conditions are giving the government an excuse to move further into the embrace of China and other less demanding benefactors, such as Iran.

“What do you need good governance for when investors are coming in anyway?” said Harsha de Silva, an economist and politician with the opposition United National party.

Whatever his critics might say, the fruits of Mr Rajapaksa’s friendship with Beijing can be seen everywhere in Sri Lanka.

In central Colombo, Chinese engineers are putting the finishing touches to the new 1,288-seat National Performing Arts Centre. “Friendship of Sino-Sri Lanka Will Last Forever” read a sign on the site in English and Chinese.

One of the Chinese team managing the project says a lack of equipment and local skilled labour means the centre is taking about one and a half times longer to build than it would in China. “In China this would be completed in one year,” he said.

In Hambantota, Mr Rajapaksa’s family are reaping the political benefits of the rapport with Beijing. The president’s family, including his son, Nimal Rajapaksa, won several seats in the district in parliamentary elections last month.

“We want to see Hambantota become a capital of Sri Lanka,” said a group of fishermen during a raucous celebration in Hambantota of Nimal’s victory.

FT.com / Asia-Pacific - Sri Lanka builds on Chinese support
 
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I'm so glad to see Sri Lanka is getting much needed support from Chinese friends and I would love to see we as a country would support them to the level we can.
 
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In central Colombo, Chinese engineers are putting the finishing touches to the new 1,288-seat National Performing Arts Centre. “Friendship of Sino-Sri Lanka Will Last Forever” read a sign on the site in English and Chinese.
 
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20090827082830102.jpg


In central Colombo, Chinese engineers are putting the finishing touches to the new 1,288-seat National Performing Arts Centre. “Friendship of Sino-Sri Lanka Will Last Forever” read a sign on the site in English and Chinese.

Impressive looking.
 
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Other side of he same coin, the true picture.


Chinese embrace may prove costly to Sri Lanka

China is recreating its Africa story in Sri Lanka. Little China enclaves are sprouting up in the Buddhist majority island nation in the Indian Ocean as President Mahinda Rajapaksa has spread the red carpet all the way from Colombo to Jaffna. Already he has ‘gifted’ projects worth US$ 6.9 billion in railways, ports, power plants and military cantonments by way of saying thanks to the ‘Comrade Capitalist’ flush with yuans and greenbacks for all the help provided in eliminating the LTTE scourge with over one billion worth arms on cash discounts, deferred payments and liberal credit.

Significantly, most of the Chinese works are located in the areas dominated by the Tamil Tigers till they were wiped out in May last year. These are high cost projects with interest rates above international norms, and inflated bills, which are hurting Lanka economy, according to Daily Mirror and Sunday Times, two Colombo publications.

Clashes, as witnessed in African countries, have begun in Sri Lanka between ‘imported’ semi-skilled and unskilled workers and local labourers. The entire Lanka project business is farmed out to four Chinese companies associated with relatives of senior leaders of the Communist regime.

China is the fourth largest trading partner of the island nation. Imports (to Lanka) have surged to $1.4 billion mark from a low base of 0.70 billion in 2004. But exports are stagnating at $ 46.08 million thus tilting the trade balance heavily in favour of the new global ‘imperial’ trader on the block, as a Sri Lankan exporter remarked in Colombo on the sidelines of a business meet, while preferring to remain anonymous
A Special Economic Zone, a 1000-acre Tapioca farm, Hambantota port, 900 MW coal fired Norochcholai power plant, Colombo-Katunayake Expressway, Pallai-Kankasanthurai rail-line, Jaffna housing complex for army and a host of other projects make the Chinese portfolio envy of export economies in the meltdown.

Beijing is underwriting most of these ventures with liberal credit. The Axim Bank of China has agreed to provide a preferential credit facility of over $ 1 billion for roads and rail projects and construction of military housing projects in the predominantly Tamil speaking Northern Province where the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) had held sway and conducted their bloody war for close to thirty years.

Sri Lanka’s north is separated from Indias Tamil speaking province in the south of the country by narrow Palk Straits. Ostensibly for this reason, India under Indira Gandhi, the Iron Lady, as she was known during her reign (24 January 1966 – 24 March 1977 and 14 January 1980 – 31 October 1984), had played the role of mid-wife at the time of LTTE’s birth in mid-seventies.

Real help to LTTE, however, came from China and Pakistan through gun running rackets and opium cartels. It continued even during the last phases of the war President Rajapaksa and his brothers successfully waged against Tamil Tiger chief Velupillai Prabhakaran. All this has been well documented. Yet, the Lanka President today is ignoring recent history. ‘Well, it is because unlike India, both countries helped him also materially and it tilted the scales in the War last year’, says a Colombo based foreign journalist.

IN IMPERIAL FOOTSTEPS

There is difference in help during war and after the war. While the war time supplies came with concessional prices or deferred payment facility, most of the Chinese projects for reconstructing the war ravaged economy are neither gratis nor liberally aided. ‘These are highly inflated commercial ventures’, the Daily Mirror reports. The outlay on a China project is sometimes twice the size of investment over similar projects undertaken by other countries.

Here is an illustrative example. China pegged the per kilometre cost of re-laying the rail track from Pallai to Kankasanthurai at more than four million American dollars. This is almost double the cost of similar projects being built elsewhere in the country mostly with local labourers. In contrast, China is brining its own labourers for building the 56- km long rail line with $ 245 million loan. This is not an exception but the norm.

China justifies ‘importing’ its own labourers. “Our workers are experienced; they are familiar with working processes; there is no language barrier,” said a Chinese manager on a rail project. He put the number of Chinese personnel on duty at various sites at around 25,000. ‘It is not a significant number. Look at out work volume’.

Analysts are not convinced though. A parallel is drawn between the Chinese practice and the indentured labour system practiced European powers particularly the British in the 18th and 19th centuries. Most Indians found today in Africa and Far East were transported between 1834 and 1920 to provide labour for the (mainly sugar) plantations, under the indenture system.

There are already fears in Sri Lanka that China is implementing the communist version of the indentured system. Many analysts aver that the imported Chinese labourers would not return home as a case would be made out on their continued relevance to a project in its implementation stage. Like it happened at the 36 MW power plant at Chunnakam in Jaffna. More than 50 Chinese personnel who were brought there did not go back. They along with their families are still living at the complex, ‘as their presence is needed to run the power plant’.

Mirigama Special Economic Zone is a China venture dedicated to Chinese investors. China is the sole authority to decide who will be allowed to set up their units in the zone. So far 29 Chinese manufacturers received the green signal to bring their investment, machinery and blue-collar workers.

Another project for China made in Sri Lanka is a Tapioca Farm spread over 1000 acres. It will come up either in central or northern province depending on the final site selection. The farm is backward integration for Chinese chip makers. Tapioca will be taken to mainland China where it will be made into chips and brought back for sale at stores in Sri Lanka.

Chinese farmers cultivate Tapioca in Sri Lanka. Their compatriots make the chips at home. And Chinese companies laugh all the way to their bank as Lanka consumer feasts on the Chinese chips. Like in the good old days of East India Company registered in the British Isles with limited liability.

In the entire chain, Lanka stands to gain a pittance – its land is taken on long term concessional lease; its labourers are engaged in low paid peripheral jobs; and its exchequer loses customs revenue as the tapioca export and chips import are allowed at concessional duty.

CHINA INSENSTIVE

China’s greed and insensitivity to local concerns is at full display at Hambantota Port, which serves its strategic maritime and security interests. Two companies, China Harbour Engineering Company and Sino-Hydro Corporation are pumping life at a cost of a $1 billion into the port, which Sri Lanka hopes will give a boost to its earnings from merchant navies passing through the Indian Ocean. For Chinese navy, it will be useful as a refuelling and docking station.

When completed in three phases (first phase will be ready by November 2010) it will be the biggest port in South Asia with facilities for ship-building, ship-repair and warehousing. As many as 33 vessels will be able to get berth at any given time.

It is stated that over 400 Chinese prisoners are brought to work as semi-skilled and unskilled workers at the Port site. They are being paid half the normal wages. For them the only hope is the promise of ‘freedom’ once the work is over. The port site is also witness to frequent labour unrest as the demands of local Sri Lankan workers for increase in lunch time and over time allowances are not accepted.

Two cantonments are coming up in Killinochchi and Mullaitivu, both in Northern Sri Lanka under an agreement signed by Basil Rajapaksa, head of Presidential Task Force for reconstruction with China. About 500 acres have been acquired for the purpose. China will also take up a housing project, costing $ 110 million, for about 60,000 families of armed services personnel in Jaffna, Kankesanthurai, Mullaitivu and Pooneryn. Chinese Defence Ministry has offered a loan of $ 20 million loan for purchasing equipment needed for building military related installations, again in North Sri Lanka.

There is no official word on urgency of beefing up military installations in North Sri Lanka. And on the continued involvement of China in the war like preparations in the post-war period so close to the Indian shores. The war with the LTTE has ended and there is no danger of another LTTE clone appearing on the scene in the foreseeable future.

Talk of a `sweet’ revenge against India for its initial support to the LTTE is a short sighted venture. It ignores the long term problems from increased presence of Chinese work force with their families. And it is a refusal to read the writing on the wall when the African experience is there to see.

Chinese embrace may prove costly to Sri Lanka
 
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We love China too.. :china: :pakistan: :china: :pakistan:

Sometimes I feel China is like Google who offer services for free and earn back in a special way that doesn't harm or offend anybody.

But Google is banned both in china and pakistan.
 
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But Google is banned both in china and pakistan.

I think these kinds are post are what Imran Khan was warning Indian Members about. :hitwall::hitwall::hitwall: Meaningless, Senseless and Factually Wrong!
 
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