Hindustan Times ST (Mumbai) - Live

‘SL won’t be hub for anti-India activities’

- Rezaul H Laskar

NEW DELHI: Sri Lanka won’t allow any country to make the island a hub for anything harmful to India’s national security, Sri Lankan foreign minister MUM Ali Sabry has said in the wake of bilateral ties taking a hit after a Chinese surveillan­ce ship visited Hambantota port last year.

In the context of strained India-China relations, Sabry said Sri Lanka wants to balance things to ensure peace. He lauded India’s role in helping Sri Lanka cope with an unpreceden­ted economic crisis and said in an interview his government plans to work more closely with New Delhi to bolster recovery, including a proposal for payments in national currencies.

Asked about the fallout of China’s Yuan Wang 5 vessel visiting Hambantota and external affairs minister S Jaishankar’s trip to Colombo, seen as an effort to reset ties, Sabry said: “We managed to talk [things] through and we have made it very clear we will not allow any country to make Sri Lanka a hub...to do anything which will be harmful for India’s national security.”

He added, “The Indian relationsh­ip is one of the most, if not the most, important relationsh­ips in our foreign policy because of the size of the economy, the neighbourh­ood, the kind of things we share with each other.”

Pointing to the large volume of India-China trade despite border tensions, Sabry said Sri Lanka wants to work with everyone but will not allow India’s legitimate security or other interests to be undermined “under the guise of anything”.

Sabry dispelled the impression that smaller countries are being forced to choose between India and China, and said: “We also must be smart enough to understand what is commerce, what is political interest, what is security threat...They will probably want to put their fingers in, but it cannot undermine somebody else’s [interests], particular­ly your neighbour’s and a neighbour who had been with us through thick and thin.”

Pointing to India’s key role in providing assurances to the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) for restructur­ing bilateral credit, Sabry said a letter provided by China on cooperatin­g for Colombo’s Extended Fund Facility (EFF) applicatio­n is “not compatible with what IMF wants”. He was hopeful a solution to the IMF bailout package will be clinched this month.

Sabry outlined proposals for closer cooperatio­n with India to drive Sri Lanka’s economic recovery, including an arrangemen­t for payments in national currencies, energy linkages to transfer wind and solar power from Sri Lanka to India, and further developmen­t of the Trincomale­e oil farm. “We want to integrate and probably allow Indian currency to be a tradeable currency in Sri Lanka, so that more Indians could come and use it, and Sri Lankans could use it without depending on third currencies,” Sabry said, adding this can on the lines of an agreement linking the digital payment systems of India and Singapore.

Sri Lanka and an Indian Oil Corporatio­n subsidiary signed agreements last year to refurbish the oil storage facility at Trincomale­e with a capacity of one million tonnes, and Sabry this could be developed as an energy hub for storage and refining.

 ?? ?? S Jaishankar with MUM Ali Sabry
S Jaishankar with MUM Ali Sabry

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