Hindustan Times (Chandigarh)

Maldives green-lights free trade agreement with China

- HT Correspond­ent

NEWDELHI: A free trade agreement with China was rushed through the Parliament in the Maldives in the absence of opposition members, who questioned whether the deal was in the best interests of their country.

The FTA, which commits both sides to reduce tariffs on more than 95% of goods to zero, was approved on Wednesday by the Parliament after a cabinet meeting chaired by President Abdulla Yameen decided to sign the deal.

The move, which comes a little more than a year after the Maldives said it would sign its first FTA with India, apparently caught New Delhi unawares and is expected to add to concerns about China’s growing influence in the strategic Indian Ocean nation. India will also be apprehensi­ve the FTA could push the Maldives into a debt trap similar to one affecting Sri Lanka.

According to the Maldives Independen­t, the FTA was passed with 30 votes in the 85-member legislatur­e. Opposition lawmakers complained they were not notified of the parliament­ary session that ratified the deal. Some said they received texts about the session after it begun.

The opposition questioned the legitimacy of the fast-tracked process as well as the lack of public disclosure and consultati­ons with the business community.

The opposition also questioned the manner in which an emergency sitting of the parliament was called to send the FTA to the national security committee. The panel completed its review of the deal in a short closed-door meeting and the document was quickly approved at a second impromptu sitting of the Parliament on Wednesday night.

Economic developmen­t minister Mohamed Saeed said the government decided to pursue the deal because the Maldives became ineligible for tariff reductions for fish exports to its largest trading partner, the EU, after it graduated from the status of “least developed country”, the Maldives Independen­t reported.

The deal will open up the “world’s largest consumer market” to Maldivian fish products and be an “incredible boost” to tourism, he said.

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