Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

SL REVERSES $300MN CHINA HOUSING DEAL AHEAD OF PM’S INDIAN VISIT

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Sri Lanka has reversed a decision to award a $300-million housing deal to China in favour of a joint venture with an Indian company, the government said, ahead of a visit by the prime minister to its South Asian neighbour.

Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe will meet his counterpar­t Narendra Modi for talks on Saturday in the Indian capital, New Delhi. The two countries have longstandi­ng ties, partly because of cultural and ethnic links with Tamils, many of whom live in the island’s north and east.

In April, state-run China Railway Beijing Engineerin­g Group Co Ltd won a tender worth more than $300 million to build 40,000 houses in Jaffna in Sri Lanka’s north, with China’s Exim bank to provide funding.

But the project was halted after residents demanded brick houses, saying they preferred their traditiona­l type of dwelling instead of the concrete structures the Chinese firm had planned.

On Wednesday, government spokesman Rajitha Senaratne said the cabinet had approved a new proposal for 28,000 houses worth 35.8 billion rupees ($210 million) to be built by Indian firm ND Enterprise­s and two Sri Lankan firms in the North and East.

The planned homes are part of a total requiremen­t of 65,000, he added.

“The rest of the houses will be given to firms which are ready to build them at lower prices,” Senaratne told reporters in Colombo, the Sri Lankan capital, adding that China could also be considered in future for the remaining housing projects.

In Beijing on Thursday, foreign ministry spokesman Lu Kang told a regular news briefing China’s cooperatio­n with Sri Lanka was derived from consultati­ons on an equal footing and he hoped that cooperatio­n would be viewed objectivel­y.

Critics have said a big Chinese port project and related infrastruc­ture in Sri Lanka’s south have been dragging the country of 21 million people deep into debt.

India has built 44,000 houses in the country’s north in the first phase of reconstruc­tion after a 26-year-war with Tamil Tiger rebels, and plans to rebuild Palaly airport and Kankesanth­urai harbour, both heavily damaged in the conflict.

But in recent years, China has swept in, building ports, power plants and highways as part of Beijing’s String of Pearls strategy to build a network of friendly ports across Asia.

India has long considered Sri Lanka, just off its southern coast, as within its sphere of influence and sought to push back against China’s expanding maritime presence.

(REUTERS)

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