Sri Lanka to go ahead with Russian firm to operate Mattala airport despite US advice

Sri Lanka will hand over its Chinese-built airport operations to a consortium with Indian and Russian firms, despite the United States has informed about a US sanction on the key stakeholder of Moscow firm, the island’s Aviation Minister said.

A joint venture between Shaurya Aeronautics Pvt Ltd of India and Airports of Regions Management Company of Russia has won the contract to manage Sri Lanka’s Mattala Rajapaksa International Airport for 30 years.

However, officials from the United States have approached Sri Lankan government to inform that the key stakeholder of Russia’s Airports of Regions Management Company is sanctioned by the US treasury in 2018 for suspected meddling in the 2016 U.S. elections,.

“That is not true and correct. We have checked that. It is only a rumour,” Aviation Minister Nimal Siripala de Silva told reporters at a media briefing in Colombo.

“I asked them to give me evidence. Nobody was able to furnish evidence.”

De Silva later told EconomyNext that a top official at the US Embassy also advised him on the Russian firm.

“We are going to hand over the Mattala airport to the Russian and Indian consortium. We had gone through a tedious procedure. I think within a few week time, we will be able to hand over the airport. They are going to take over the airport,” he said.

Officials at the US Embassy were not immediately available for comments on the issue.

The airport, built at a cost of $209 million, was once dubbed the “world’s emptiest airport” because of a lack of flights. The Minister said it incurs a loss of 3 billion rupees (US$10 million) annually.

The airport is strategically located close to the Hambantota port on the southern coast of Sri Lanka where China operates a port on a 99-year lease and also Sinopec is building a US$5 billion refinery.

It has been used sparingly when flights are unable to land in the country’s main airport at Katunayaka, 30 km north to Colombo.

Airports of the Regions, the Russian firm in the joint consortium, is a large airport holding in Russia.

Until 2021, the strategic investor of the company was the Renova Group of Companies, owned by Viktor Felixovich Vekselberg, a Ukrainian born Russian who was sanctioned by the US treasury in 2018 for suspected meddling in the 2016 U.S. elections.

In 2021, however, Vekselberg transferred control over the management company “Airports of the Regions” to a former top manager of Renova, according to media reports.

Sri Lanka used Mattala airport to attract more Russian and Ukrainian tourists soon after the Covid-19 lock down.

Under the previous government, this airport was offered to India with an aim to boost Indian cultural tourists into Sri Lanka. However, the discussion with India to operate the airport did not succeed.

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President Ranil supports Election Commission’s decision on presidential polls

President Ranil Wickremesinghe says he firmly believes that the President’s term is 5 years and supports the Election Commission’s decision to hold the Presidential Election in 2024, the President’s Media Division reported.

An entrepreneur named C.D. Lenaw had filed a fundamental rights (FR) petition yesterday (3) seeking an order preventing the calling of a Presidential Election until the Supreme Court delivers its interpretation on the presidential poll date.

The petition has requested that an interim order be issued to prevent the holding of the presidential election within the currently scheduled period until the court delivers its interpretation on the date of the next presidential election.

Commenting on this, the President stated that neither he nor his lawyers were consulted or informed about this petition before it was submitted.

The media release issued by the PMD states:

“It has been brought to the attention of the Government that one Chamindra Dayan Lenawa has filed an Application in the Supreme Court under and in terms of Articles 126 read with Articles 12(1), 82(6), 3, 4, 118 and 125 of the Constitution of the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka praying, inter alia, for a declaration that Article 30(2) should not be interpreted to be amended ab initio by Section 3 of the 19th Amendment to the Constitution and accordingly the Election Commission shall hold the next presidential election taking into account that the term of the office of the President is 6 years and for an interim order restraining the members of the Election Commission from taking any further steps in conducting a Presidential Election in 2024 until the Supreme Court determines this Application.

“President Ranil Wickremesinghe states that the said Chamindra Dayan Lenawa has not consulted the President or his lawyers prior to filing this Application in the Supreme Court.

“Further, President Ranil Wickremesinghe is firmly of the opinion that the term of the President is 5 years, and the Election Commission is correct in taking steps to hold the Presidential Election in 2024.”

Eastern Muslims Long for Leader Who Can Ensure Equality By Naalir Jamaldeen

Against the backdrop of the upcoming Presidential Election, the Muslim community is eagerly waiting to elect a leader who treats every citizen equally, particularly minority communities, by rooting out marginalisation and discrimination.

Ceylon Today spoke to Muslims in the Eastern Province to learn more about Muslim political representatives. Their collective allegation was that the advent of Muslim political parties has distanced Muslims from other communities. This situation must change soon and this change will only be realised when a leader who follows democratic principles takes the reins.

Role and contribution of Muslim leaders

Mohammed Ismail Mohammed Faisar said before the emergence of Muslim political parties with Islamic banners, the people belonging to every community, be it Sinhalese, Tamils or Muslims, lived in harmony while protecting their own ethnic identity, the integrity and reconciliation among diverse ethnic groups remained at the highest level. Today, it has turned topsy-turvy. A new political culture must emerge in the country in which every citizen must be able to practise their religion freely.

Mohammed Faisar said in the early times, the Muslim Community didn’t have separate political parties. But then Muslim leaders could win the political and other aspirations of the Muslim community by working together with the main political parties and maintaining cordial relations with them. There is enough evidence in history about it. Muslim leaders like Attorney M.C. Siddi Lebbe, former Sri Lankan High Commissioner for Pakistan T.B. Jayah, former Member of Senate of Ceylon A.M.A. Azeez and other leaders who emerged from the Muslim community did not try to form a political party for Muslims. If they had done so, the situation would have worsened. They didn’t make such an effort because they knew its consequences for the Muslim community.

Mutual understanding and good relations with other communities

As those leaders had good relations with the leaders of majority political parties and had a mutual understanding with each other party, they had no issue in bringing the issues of the Muslim community to the attention of rulers. As they had the power to bargain with the then governments, the Muslim community easily won their privileges and rights same as the majority community of this country had or enjoyed. The Muslim community had enough freedom to express their views then and lived in a safe environment. Unity and mutual understanding between every community prevailed. Though Muslim political parties, with Muslim names, were formed, that concept is not feasible in the present context because the Muslim community itself will transform into a marginalised community.

“The Muslim political parties are viewed by majority communities like racial political parties now, it cannot be considered as a wrong view and they can’t be blamed even because the Muslim political parties have filled their vote banks by spreading their own ideologies under the guise of fighting for their community. I consider that the Muslim political parties are not necessary in this context because certain factions were waiting for opportunities to create problems with the Muslim community,” Mohammed Faisar said.

The present Muslim political parties have done nothing good to the Muslim community except for questioning their existence and transforming them into an isolated community in the country on the grounds of race or religion. There were ample examples in the past.

Muslim political parties’ failure to fulfil their obligations

When the Muslim community confronted many problems after the Easter Sunday terror attack and in several instances before it, the leaders and members of Muslim political parties who came to power getting the votes of Muslim folk did nothing to wipe out their grievances, forgetting the slogans they shouted before coming to power. In the present context and even in future, the Muslim political parties will not be suitable for the country. The time has come for every citizen of this country to rally under the banner of unity and to work for the country beyond race, caste or religious barriers. The Muslim political parties totally failed to fulfil their promises and the aspirations of the Muslim community as well and as a result, those parties are becoming unpopular among the Muslim community and will vanish very soon, Mohammed Faisar added.

Upcoming Presidential Election

The entrance of Muslim political parties and their demands during the upcoming Presidential Election would make the existence of the Muslim community questionable further. The leaders of Muslim political parties remained silent when the Muslims were attacked and severe damage was caused to their properties. The Muslim community is showing interest in casting their votes for majority political parties in the elections to be held in future including the presidential and general elections.

The past mistakes of Muslim political parties have made Muslims think twice before aligning with them. The Muslim community seems to work for the mainstream political parties like Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) or United National Party (UNP) or Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) in future because it is the only available means the Muslim community has to win its fundamental rights and privileges. Though the Muslim political parties contributed to an extent to the advancement of the community, it is an undeniable truth that they did nothing for Muslims using the power they had.

The Muslim community has clearly understood the nature of leaders and members of Muslim political parties and they can’t be deceived once by spreading the racism among the Muslim folk in the Eastern Province as in the past. Now, the Muslim community remains vigilant of those leaders and the members of their parties. The Muslims gained nothing from them so far except for those who mollycoddled them. The members of Muslim political parties who obtained the votes of Muslims, especially the Eastern Province Muslims giving them fake promises now work with majority political parties completely shattering their hopes. Now Muslim MPs and their party leaders function in Parliament separately with different agendas. It is the present state of Muslim political parties in Sri Lanka. The Muslims will gain nothing from them even in future.

Eliminating racism

Jawhary Abdul Azeez said racism, separatism, demands for a separate State in the North and East, religionism or regionalism persisted in the country in some form over nearly 75 years since Sri Lanka received independence from British imperialists. The leaders who governed the country in the interim could be the cause for the eruption of such a miserable situation. If it lasts, no one can prevent the country from collapsing economically. In such a situation, the existence of a minority Muslim community too will remain questionable. “We need a leader who can treat everyone equally, like parents looking after their children,” he said.

But after the Aragalaya, the majority of people have started to feel that every citizen of this country is equal and must live together in harmony and those who come with racial ideologies must be rejected. This is a good sign for the restoration of peace and unity in the country. Though citizens want to live in harmony, politicians try to create divisions among the people in terms of race, religion or caste for their political survival. Though it is misinterpreted by certain factions, there is no room for racism or regionalism in Islam. It promotes unity and coexistence between different ethnic groups. Islam always prioritises patriotism, Abdul Azeez said.

We are Sri Lankans and unity is our strength

The change of thinking “We are Sri Lankans and unity is our strength” has taken place among the majority of people in Sri Lanka following the Aragalaya, particularly among the Sinhalese. Tamil, Sinhala and Muslim communities live in harmony in the North and East. For instance, the majority of residents in the Kinniya Divisional Secretariat (DS) Division are Muslims but Sinhala and Tamil people also live in some places in this DS Division. Still, they live in harmony, without any disputes, according to Abdul Azeez.

“I don’t think the politicians who come to the people asking for votes with racial ideologies will have any future in politics. Actually, Aragalaya was the turning point in the political history of Sri Lanka. The Provincial Council system did not benefit the people. We need a united Sri Lanka governed by the Central Government where every citizen has equal access to everything including employment,” Abdul Azeez said.

Abdul Azeez said there are Muslims, Buddhists, Tamils and Christians in Malaysia and Singapore. Laws have been enacted in those countries giving equal access to every community and no one can interfere in others’ personal matters and doing so is an offence. Such a system must be implemented in Sri Lanka, where every issue, be it ethnicity or religion-related, can be resolved within democratic norms. Because Sri Lanka is a multi-ethnic country, there must be arrangements in the Constitution to elect a President even from the Muslim and Tamil communities.

The politicians always try to keep the Sinhalese, Tamils and Muslims away because if they unite, they will not have any future in politics. They use racism as a pawn in their political chessboard. If there is a multi-language government school in Kinniya DS Division, it will play a pivotal role in building up the unity between, Muslim, Tamil and Sinhala communities in the region, according to Abdul Azeez.

S.M. Abdul Niyas said it is questionable whether the Muslim MPs who represent the Muslim political parties had any underhand deal with the Government to cast their votes to enact the 18th, 19th and 20th amendments to the Constitution in Parliament. At a time when Muslims were facing various issues including the forced cremation of bodies of Muslims who died in the Covid-19 pandemic, the members and leaders of Muslim political parties who were in Parliament then could do nothing to stop the forced cremation. “Due to such activities, the Muslims who sent them to Parliament with thousands of hopes and dreams were disappointed. Without caring for their own community, they worked in favour of the Government. There were many such instances in the past,” he said.

Behaviour of Muslim political representatives

Abdul Niyas said the behaviour of Muslim politicians isn’t representative of the Muslim community. It is a setback that remains in Muslim politics. Though the politicians from the majority community acted in a manner of affecting the privileges and rights of Tamils and Muslims, the Muslim politicians behaved awkwardly concerning the problems of the Muslim community. Due to the bitter experience, they suffered in the past, the Muslim folk are in great suspicion today about Muslim MPs.

If the Muslims speak up, the truth will come to light. Unfortunately, the Muslims don’t have an alternative leadership today. There is a possibility that the Presidential Election will be postponed by one year. In addition to the mainstream political parties’ presidential candidates, there is a possibility that the Tamil community will field a candidate to represent their interests. Certain factions in the Muslim community are of the same stance as Tamils, Abdul Niyas said.

Abdul Niyas said its worst consequences will be felt by Muslims in the future. If such an imprudent decision was taken by the Muslim political leadership, without a proper plan, it would definitely affect the younger generation in future while making their existence questionable. As Sri Lanka is not a country free from racism or communalism, Muslim politicians must exercise caution before taking a nationally important decision or making a statement publicly that has a direct impact on the existence of the Muslim community. The Muslims must move their pawns on the political chessboard skilfully considering all these aspects. Muslim politics must be based on Islamic principles.

Responsibility of Muslim community

The Muslims tend to think more calmly today. After the anarchy unleashed on Muslims by the SLPP, the Muslim folk have decided to support the UNP, changing the stance they had earlier. Muslim leaders always tried to protect their positions and privileges but not the community that had kept great confidence and trust in them. In the present context, the Muslim community is in a critical state of who is to guide them and who will fight for them. The Muslim civil society organisations in Sri Lanka are inactive. Even though Muslims think rationally, Muslim political leaders remain an obstacle to the community, Abdul Niyas added.

Ensuring democracy

Dr. Abdul Rauff Bizrul Haafi said though democracy is the only means to ensure the safety of a minority community in a country, it is doubtful whether it is accurately practised. The same situation prevails in Sri Lanka today. If the voting rights in a democratic country are not exercised properly, the probability of the wrong person being elected is high and it will lead the country toward anarchy. In countries like the US, they have statutory bodies like the Senate Board to control the Government, in particular the President from misusing his/her power. Due to the lack of such a mechanism in third-world countries, ensuring democracy has become more challenging.

Dr. Bizrul Haafi also suggested that if there are statutory bodies like the Senate in third-world countries, the governing bodies can be kept in check. And then ordinary citizens, in particular the minority communities, will be able to enjoy democratic rights.

President responds to petition filed to halt Presidential election

President Ranil Wickremesinghe said today that Chamindra Dayan Lenawa, who filed a fundamental rights petition before the Supreme Court to halt the Presidential election, had not consulted the President or his legal representatives before filing this application, the President’s Media Division said.

The fundamental rights petition was filed before the Supreme Court yesterday seeking an order to prevent the Election Commission from conducting the Presidential election till the Court decides on the incumbent President’s tenure.

The President’s Media Division said that the government has taken note of this development.

They said that President Wickremesinghe is firmly of the opinion that the term of the President is five years, and the Election Commission is correct in taking steps to hold the Presidential Election in 2024.

Japan to Expand Maritime Cooperation with Sri Lanka; Vision for Peace and Stability in the Indian Ocean

The Minister for Foreign Affairs of Japan Yoko Kamikawa has said that given the strategic importance of Sri Lanka which is situated on the sea lane between Africa and the Pacific, Japan aims to further strengthen cooperation with Sri Lanka in the maritime sector.

She made this remark during a meeting with her Sri Lankan counterpart Ali Sabry, PC in Tokyo.

Minister Sabry, according to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs of Japan, responded saying that Sri Lanka, as a peace-loving maritime nation, will continue to cooperate with various countries and contribute to the peace and stability in the Indian Ocean.

The Japanese Minister for Foreign Affairs Kamikawa had expressed hope that initiatives like the Japanese Cabinet Office’s “Ship for World Youth” program, which became the opportunity for Minister Sabry’s visit to Japan 28 years ago, as well as the new Project for Human Resource Development Scholarship (JDS), will nurture talented individuals that will contribute to Sri Lanka’s development and serve as bridges between the two countries.

The two Ministers agreed that active people-to-people exchanges are the foundation of bilateral relations, and they concurred on actively promoting such exchanges between the two countries.

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No ill-will between Sri Lanka president and ruling party, but views differ: Rajapaksa

There is no bad feeling between President Ranil Wickremesinghe and the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP), but the president and the ruling party are of two different political positions, SLPP leader Mahinda Rajapaksa said.

The former president told reporters Monday July 01 night at the Bandaranaike International Airport (BIA) in Colombo that the candidate the SLPP opts to back at the upcoming presidential election will have to be someone who can work with the party.

“We’re democratic. We do something after discussing it with everyone,” he said.

Rajapksa had just returned from Beijing, having concluded an “official” four-day visit. In Beijing, he attended the 70th anniversary of the Five Principles of Peaceful Coexistence where he was greeted by Chinese President Xi Jinping.

Asked by reporters if there was bad feeling between the SLPP and President Wickremesinghe, Rajapaksa said: “There is no reason for bad feeling. Politically we’re of two different views.”

Rajapaksa recently spoke against the Wickremesinghe administration’s moves to restructure state-owned enterprises, claiming that a majority of his party are opposed to the “sale of national assets”, even as ministers representing the party continue to express support for ongoing reforms.

A number of prominent SLPP members including Power & Energy Minister Kanchana Wijesekara, Foreign Minister Ali Sabry and MP Mahindananda Aluthgamage were seen at a political rally held in Matara on Sunday June 30 ostensibly as part of President Wickremesinghe’s election campaign, though he has yet to officially announce his candidature.

Asked for comment on the presidential election to be held between September 17 and October 18, Rajapaksa said: “We will put a candidate and see. Wait a little. The party hasn’t made a decision yet.”

“It is someone who can work with us that we can give it to. It must come from the people. Leaders come from the people,” he said.

He denied that the SLPP has already selected a candidate.

“No, not yet. Let’s see. Thee is still time,” he said.

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India provides additional grant for Madhu transit housing project

India is to provide an additional grant for the Madhu transit housing construction project.

The High Commissioner of India, Santosh Jha and Secretary, Ministry of Urban Development and Housing W.S. Sathyananda signed and exchanged diplomatic letters on 02 July 2024 to formalize modalities related to the Low Cost Transit Housing Construction Project at Madhu Shrine, Mannar, consequent to the decision of Government of India (GOI) to provide an additional grant of around SLR 100 million for the project.

GOI’s total commitment to the project now stands at over SLR 400 million.

Responding to the challenges that arose in the economic landscape of Sri Lanka, GOI had decided to infuse additional funds into nine ongoing grant projects in order to expeditiously complete them, while also minimizing the impact of the significant rise in cost of construction materials on the original scope of the projects.

The Low Cost Transit Housing Construction Project at Madhu Shrine, Mannar, is among the said nine projects.

A total of 96 transit houses shall now be constructed with the GOI grant at Madhu Shrine that could be used by pilgrims visiting the shrine. The project is currently underway and the proposed transit houses are at various stages of construction.

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SLPP’s condition to consider Ranil as presidential candidate

SLPP General Secretary Sagara Kariyawasam says that if President Ranil Wickremesinghe resigns from the United National Party (UNP) and joins the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP), the party may consider him for the presidential candidacy.

He made this statement while speaking to the media following a discussion at the SLPP headquarters.

Kariyawasam stated, “Regarding the next presidential election, we have not presented a specific candidate yet. We will nominate the right candidate at the appropriate time, who will contest under the ‘floewer bud’ symbol.”

When asked if Wickremesinghe could be the common candidate, Kariyawasam responded, “A candidate of the SLPP will be put forward under the ‘flower bud’ symbol. If Wickremesinghe leaves the UNP and joins our party, we will consider his candidacy.”

Free visas for 60-plus nations: Process to conclude this month

While the Government is working to expand the number of countries eligible for free visa facilities, the Sri Lanka Tourism Development Authority (SLTDA) stated that the process is expected to be finalised by the end of this month.

When contacted, SLTDA Chairperson Priantha Fernando told The Daily Morning yesterday (2) that the Ministry of Tourism has submitted a joint Cabinet paper with the Ministry of Foreign Affairs to seek Government approval for this expansion.

“Recently, the President appointed an inter-ministerial committee to look into the visa policy. They are reportedly planning to submit their proposals by the middle of this month. Accordingly, we hope that a final decision would likely be reached towards the end of this month,” said Fernando.

He also noted that the proposal aims to increase the number of countries with free visa access to over 60. Fernando further emphasised the potential benefits, noting that the SLTDA supports the initiative as it is expected to significantly boost tourist arrivals and generate a surplus in tourism income.

Last month (June), Minister of Tourism Harin Fernando said that the country must issue free visas to tourists for more countries in order to compete with its regional competitors and to achieve the nation’s ambitious target of 2.3 million tourist arrivals within the year. The Minister expressed that the special committee report on the proposal to issue free visas to tourists from 67 countries will be presented to the Cabinet of Ministers within the next two weeks. Furthermore, Fernando revealed a number of initiatives by the Government intended to attract more tourists to the country.

“Our competitors, the Maldives, Thailand, Cambodia, Malaysia, and Singapore all offer free visa facilities. We have seen a significant increase in the number of requests for six-months, multiple entry visas. There has been a similar increase in the number of requests for one-year, two-year, and five-year visas. However, in order to be competitive as a tourist destination, we must relax the regulations for single entry visas as well,” he noted.

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What is MR doing in China? By Ranga Jeyasuriya

Though China-India bonhomie collapsed after the border war in 1962, the bilateral partnerships, founded on five principles, saw most Asian states espousing a position of ‘neutrality’ during the conflict
Former President Mahinda Rajapaksa last week visited China on a four-day visit during which, as local media reported, he was expected to “discuss Sri Lanka’s debt restructuring with Chinese Premier Li Qiang and Foreign Minister Wang Yi.”

The discussions were also expected to “cover potential development projects beneficial to Sri Lanka and convey gratitude for China’s support.”

In which capacity Rajapaksa would negotiate on behalf of Sri Lanka has been a moot point:

He is only a Member of Parliament, and there was no mention of him being a special envoy of the President or the Government of Sri Lanka.

Considering that his party, Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP), is still the key backer of the incumbent president, though a good part of SLPP MPs who aligned with Wickremesinghe seemed to have broken ranks with the Rajapaksas, he still has some clout. However, he is also loathed by a large portion of the Sri Lankan public, who blame him for the economic crisis, though he is surely not the only one responsible.

Commemoration ceremony

Rajapaksa visited China to participate in the commemoration ceremony of the 70th anniversary of the five principles of peaceful co-existence, which was also attended by former political leaders from countries including Vietnam, Myanmar, Laos, Thailand, Indonesia, the Maldives, Egypt, Ethiopia, South Africa, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, Brazil, Guyana, Japan, Republic of Korea, Italy, France, Croatia and Slovenia, representatives of international/regional organisations, and diplomatic envoys and academics, according to a communique issued at the end of the conference.

He was photographed shaking hands with Chinese President Xi Jinping and was also visited by Vice Foreign Minister Sun Weidong. (Unlike most other countries, China has five vice foreign ministers). There was no mention of him holding one-on-one discussions on debt restructuring with China’s Prime Minister Li Qiang or Foreign Minister Wang Yi. Probably that was redundant since last week, the government announced a debt restructuring deal with Paris Club, India and China, as well as China’s Exim Bank.

The Five Principles of Peaceful Co-existence is the central pillar of China’s official foreign policy, first announced by China’s first Prime Minister, Zhou Enlai, in 1954 to assuage the concerns of China’s neighbours.

During the early years of the founding of the PRC, China’s new Communist rulers distrusted the bourgeois elites of newly independent former colonies and rejected ‘non-alignment’ as ‘reactionary’. Suspicion was mutual, and the native elites in India, Pakistan, Indonesia, Myanmar, and even Sri Lanka, who shared similar grievances of colonialism as China did, were still wary of China’s professed goal of promoting the worldwide revolution and attempts to sow discord in their countries.

At the end of the Korean War, as war-weary China faced growing international isolation, Zhou announced the Five Principles, marking a shift from China’s initial highly doctrinaire worldview.

The five principles of peaceful co-existence are mutual respect for sovereignty and territorial integrity, mutual non-aggression, mutual non-interference in each other’s internal affairs, equality and mutual benefit, and peaceful co-existence.

The five principles, known as “Panchaseela” in Nehru’s India, reassured China’s peaceful intentions and were later incorporated into the Sino-India agreement on trade in Tibet and the Sino-Burma agreement. This also made communist China more palatable to other Asian countries, paving the way for diplomatic relations with countries such as Nepal in 1955 and Sri Lanka under S.W.R.D. Bandaranaike government in 1957.

Though China-India bonhomie collapsed after the border war in 1962, the bilateral partnerships, founded on five principles, saw most Asian states espousing a position of ‘neutrality’ during the conflict.

High and Lows

The height of the Sino-Sri Lankan relationship is none other than the two-term Presidency of Mahinda Rajapaksa, during which China was the key backer of the government’s military campaign against terrorism and later the key lender and diplomatic partner at the international forums.

During the same period, Sino-Sri Lanka relations were upgraded to a strategic partnership, high on the ladder in the importance China pays to a bilateral partnership, a tad below ‘an All-weather partnership that defines its relations with Pakistan.

It had been fashionable, some time back, to blame Chinese loans erroneously for Sri Lanka’s sovereign debt crisis, though the reckless commercial borrowing in the form of International Sovereign Bonds was the culprit. There is no gainsaying that Chinese loans were the primary catalyst in transforming Sri Lanka’s infrastructure landscape. Only a partisan fool would overlook the long-held infrastructure backlog in this country at the turn of the 2000s and the persistent official apathy and dramatic transformation that followed, bankrolled by China during the next 15 years, which by most standards did the catch-up with the past 30 years of under-investment in infrastructure. It is a shame that Mahinda Rajapaksa, who ushered in that revolution, singularly failed to introduce necessary structural reforms to make full use of these new roads, ports and infrastructure to turbo-charge the economy. Perhaps he listened too much to his caveman economists, trusted wheeler dealers and insular nationalists and paid the price.
The fall of the Rajapaksas also strained Sri Lanka’s relations with China. Though Beijing claims that it conducts foreign relations with countries and not personalities, it, in fact, invests heavily, just like any other country would do, in personal relationships. Mahinda Rajapaksa was not just China’s man in Sri Lanka, but given his monopolisation of power of the state around him and his family, Sri Lanka’s relations with China were seen as an extension of the Rajapaksa regime. This personalisation and politicisation of the bilateral relationship and China’s economic diplomacy later resulted in the suspension of some key Chinese projects, such as Colombo Port City, at the advent of the Yahapalanaya.

Similarly, the downfall of the Rajapaksas has now dampened the bilateral relationship. That is sad, considering China is one of the two key bilateral relations of Sri Lanka, the other being India.

These two relationships would gain added strategic importance when the global power transition further deepens in the coming decades. No matter what the naysayers bet on, the US$ 17.5 trillion Chinese economy growing at a modest 4-5 per cent would contribute to the bulk of global growth for the coming decades. Sri Lanka should strive to cash on this windfall and the proliferation of China-centric supply chains out of the Mainland.

False binaries

In order to do that, Sri Lanka should get over the false binaries that have always hamstrung its foreign relations. False binaries make the leaders think the relations with one country come at the expense of the other, making countries pick either of great powers at the cost of the other.

This has been a salient flaw in the Rajapaksa foreign policy, whose relations with China came at the expense of the West. But also, to some degree, the same fallacies persist in Ranil Wickremesinghe’s foreign policy, whose relationship with the West and India seems to come at the expense of long-cultivated ties with China. (No one knows what Sajith Premadasa or JVP thinks!)

The often-exaggerated dilemma of navigating between two great powers is actually complicated by these domestic follies of self-seeking leaders and much less by systemic concerns.

Sri Lanka should rebuild its relationship with China and do it urgently. It should recognise the Sino-Sri Lanka relations as a priority in the country’s foreign relations.

On China’s part, it should move past the Rajapaksas. Being seen with the Rajapaksas is now a liability and would make many millions of Sri Lankans think of it as an extension of the discarded old regime.

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