Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

There's nothing called a free shipment of fuel

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Hardly a fortnight after the Tamil Nadu state government made a much-publicised donation of humanitari­an assistance to the suffering people of Sri Lanka, including kerosene for the fishermen of the Northern Jaffna peninsula, the familiar armadas of bottom trawlers have come charging from the state's coastline illegally into Sri Lanka’s territoria­l waters to take away the catch for its multimilli­on US dollar fisheries industry. What the right hand giveth the suffering Sri Lankans, the left hand taketh away.

With the end of the two-month fishing ban imposed by the state government to facilitate fish breeding in these waters, Sri Lankan fishermen in the North are crying out to their elected representa­tives and the authoritie­s in Colombo to stop this blatant poaching and ensure their livelihood is protected amidst the worst economic crisis they have faced.

Sri Lanka's continuing economic crisis and its total reliance on Indian largesse for an economic lifeline have resulted in a virtual capitulati­on to India's long-term strategic interests in turning its southern neighbourh­ood into its fiefdom.

Last week's bombshell remark by the Ceylon Electricit­y Board (CEB) chief to a parliament­ary oversight committee that he received instructio­ns from President Gotabaya Rajapaksa to award a wind power project in the North to a financier of the Indian Prime Minister on the latter's request without calling for tenders, opened a can of worms.

The President denied such a request was made to the CEB chief, who has since resigned and the Indian financier, already having clinched a tender in the Colombo Port earlier this year, said how hurt he was that such terrible things were said about him. The entire issue has caused yet another stink in the award of projects under this Government where the terms and conditions, prices, vast acreage to be given to the Indian entity etc., are unknown.

In a corruption-driven economy such as what exists in Sri Lanka, it is hard to decipher who is telling the truth, but what is a fact is the adventuris­m displayed by the Indian Government in the geopolitic­al commercial exploitati­on of Sri Lanka's economic crisis with overall strategic goals in mind.

As stated before, the arm-twisting began on the eve of former Finance Minister Basil Rajapaksa's visit to New Delhi last December seeking alms. He was told in no uncertain terms that Colombo needed to ink projects that were promised and in the pipeline for years as a prerequisi­te. These included the oil tank farms near the Trincomale­e port and energy projects in the East and the North-East. They shooed away any presence of the Chinese wanting to do business in the area, no doubt with ulterior motives by themselves.

Now comes the next stage; to entrench the 'big boys' of Indian business – the Adanis, Tatas and Ambanis into the local commercial landscape. These proposed investment­s cannot be outside a fair and competitiv­e procuremen­t process, exactly what India and the US criticized Chinese investment­s in Sri Lanka for lack of transparen­cy. They also seem to concentrat­e around ports and coastal areas patently with extra-commercial agendas of the Indian Government. In fact, the Indian media has questioned what a high-ranking RSS/BJP functionar­y close to the political hierarchy in Delhi was doing in Colombo last week and if he was lobbying for the Indian corporate big boys with the blessings of its Ministry of External Affairs.

Reports swirling around the political grapevine said the highprofil­e visitor met the President and Prime Minister in Colombo and even the businessma­n who replaced Basil Rajapaksa as an MP, and is earmarked to be the next Minister of Foreign Investment. Significan­tly, this new entrant to the political scene is expected to be put in charge of initiating Techno Parks in Jaffna and Mannar.

Is this all sheer coincidenc­e, or part of the grand scheme of things being hatched across the Palk Strait with the political leaders in Colombo getting sucked in, willingly or otherwise, into the vortex of India's geopolitic­al agenda for this neck of the woods?

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