“Sri Lanka wasn’t forced to accept Chinese loans” – Envoy

(UTV|COLOMBO) – Sri Lanka’s Ambassador to China Karunasena Kodituwakku on Wednesday (22) strongly pushed back recent media reports criticising Chinese investments in his country, saying that Sri Lanka was not forced to accept investments and loans from China and wants to continue cooperation with China under the Belt and Road (B&R) initiative, the Global Times reported.

Chinese investments in Sri Lanka have come under increased criticism, mostly from Western media and Officials, who have accused China of using a debt trap to gain control of strategic commercial routes, after a Chinese company’s acquisition of stakes in a strategic port.

But the Sri Lankan Ambassador painted a vastly different picture.

“What I want to highlight here is that Sri Lanka asked for this project loan on our own. We were not forced to get this loan,” Kodituwakku told the Global Times in an interview in Beijing. “In the case of Chinese finance for Hambantota, that came to Sri Lanka at the request of Sri Lanka.”

Due to unsatisfactory performance at the port, China Merchants Port Holdings and the Sri Lanka Ports Authority last year inked a deal to transfer a 70 per cent stake in two joint ventures (JVs) that would manage the port.

Under the agreement, which is valid for 99-years, the Sri Lanka Ports Authority (SLPA) will, starting after 10-years, gradually purchase stakes in the JVs to reach a 50-50 equal stake, according to the Xinhua News Agency.

Hyping the news, some Western media organisations and Officials have accused China of exerting an influence in countries along the B&R initiative through what they describe as debt traps.

But Kodituwakku on Wednesday called such accusations unfounded. “It is very unfair to blame China or [the Export-Import Bank of China] or the firms that constructed the Hambantota port,” he said. “It is a decision taken by the Government of Sri Lanka… if something was wrong in the decision, we are responsible.”

In the interview, Kodituwakku also stressed that Sri Lanka is seeking more Chinese involvement in economic development in his country, from industrial bases to export capacity building.

“We need more and more shipments and investment in the port and at the same time we would like to build a good industrial base in the surrounding area,” the Ambassador said. “Therefore, we would like to ask the Chinese business community to come to Sri Lanka and to invest in surrounding areas to build an industrial base.”

While Sri Lanka wants to further strengthen its diplomatic and economic ties with China, the country is also open to cooperation with other countries such as neighbouring India and the United States (US), which has increasingly shifted its strategic focus to the Indo-Pacific region, the Envoy said.

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