Yahoo – AFP,
9 December 2017
Colombo (AFP) - Sri Lanka Saturday handed over a deep-sea port to a Chinese firm, in a deal agreed to boost the cash-strapped island's finances that has raised concerns at home and abroad over Beijing's growing influence.
![]() |
| Sri Lanka hands over debt-laden port to Chinese owner |
Colombo (AFP) - Sri Lanka Saturday handed over a deep-sea port to a Chinese firm, in a deal agreed to boost the cash-strapped island's finances that has raised concerns at home and abroad over Beijing's growing influence.
The $1.12
billion deal first announced in July lets a Chinese state company take over the
southern port of Hambantota, which straddles the world's busiest east-west
shipping route, on a 99-year lease.
"With
the signing of the agreement today the Treasury has received $300
million," Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe said at a ceremony in the
capital to mark the handover.
"This
is the beginning of our debt settlement," Wickremesinghe said.
The
loss-making port will now be jointly managed by the state-owned Sri Lanka Port
Authority and China Merchants Port Holdings.
Sri Lanka
owes China $8 billion that former president Mahinda Rajapaksa's regime borrowed
for its infrastructure development projects, including the port.
The deal
has raised concerns at home and overseas, where countries such as India and the
United States are known to be worried that China getting a foothold at the
deep-sea port could give it a military naval advantage in the Indian Ocean.
On Friday
Sri Lanka's parliament approved wide-ranging tax concessions for the port deal,
including a tax holiday of up to 32 years for the Chinese firm, that opposition
parties objected to.
"Please
tell this House the details of very favourable tax concessions you gave China
on the deal. What are you getting out of it?" Anura Dissanayake, an
opposition law marker asked in parliament Saturday.
Sri Lanka
has said it wants to reduce its high foreign debt with the proceeds of the
Hambantota port deal, and is selling off some other enterprises to raise
revenue.

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.