Arab News

Indian PM heads to Sri Lanka as Chinese influence rises

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COLOMBO: India’s Prime Minister Narendra Modi arrived in Sri Lanka on a charm offensive as New Delhi seeks to reassert its influence on the island amid signs of a Chinese comeback.

Sri Lanka’s President Maithripal­a Sirisena came to power in January 2015 promising to loosen ties with China after a decade of hefty funding by Beijing under his predecesso­r.

When Modi visited the island shortly afterwards, he promised to “script a golden chapter in the history of India- Sri Lanka relations.”

Just two years later, analysts say Beijing’s influence is on the rise again as Colombo struggles to find alternativ­e sources of foreign capital.

For India, which wants to keep Sri Lanka within its sphere of influence, that is a worrying sign.

“For Modi to visit again so soon is clearly an expression of India’s concerns about China’s deepening economic roots in Sri Lanka and the potential strategic, even military, advantages this might ultimately bring,” said Alan Keenan of the Internatio­nal Crisis Group.

Sirisena halted all Chinesefun­ded infrastruc­ture projects when he swept to power in 2015, ousting the island’s strongman leader Mahinda Rajapaksa, who had aggressive­ly courted Beijing.

Now these projects, which included new highways, railway lines and a telecommun­ications tower, are back on track.

A $ 1.4 billion Chinese- funded land reclamatio­n project outside Colombo harbor has also been relaunched.

New Delhi has long been nervous of a Chinese presence at the Colombo port, a key transshipm­ent point for Indian cargo.

Even more controvers­ially, Colombo is trying to sell a controllin­g interest in a strategica­lly located deep- sea port in the south to China.

Shortly after hosting Modi, Sri Lanka’s Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe will travel to China, where he is expected to try to finalize that sale.

Experts say India simply does not have deep enough pockets to take over China’s place as the country’s main financial backer.

“The new government realizes that its Western allies have not delivered and only China has the deep pockets to invest,” said Sri Lankan political analyst Kusal Perera.

“The new government has understood this reality and they are wooing China while keeping India on board.”

Last time Modi visited Sri Lanka, he made a highly symbolic trip to the war- ravaged north in a demonstrat­ion of support for Sri Lanka’s mostly Hindu Tamil minority, who share close cultural and religious ties with counterpar­ts living in southern India.

This time, he will be guest of honor at a major Buddhist festival — a move seen as aimed at winning the support of the Sinhalese majority, many of who are suspicious of India.

Former leader Rajapaksa’s political allies among the Sinhalese community this month called for a black flag protest during Modi’s visit.

Manoj Joshi of the Observer Research Foundation think tank in Delhi said Modi would likely use the visit to deepen economic ties with Sri Lanka. But he cautioned against overly high expectatio­ns.

“Everyone in New Delhi has realized that the new Colombo government isn’t going to abandon China just like that. It has certain big infrastruc­ture investment­s,” he said.

“When confronted by a big neighbor like India, they can leverage China, just like other countries in the neighborho­od like Nepal and Bangladesh.”

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