The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

President: China cannot use port for military purposes

- By Tomomi Asano

COLOMBO — China will not be allowed to use the southern Sri Lankan port of Hambantota for military purposes, Sri Lankan President Ranil Wickremesi­nghe said in his

rst interview with the Japanese media since taking o ce.

“We do not want Hambantota to be used for military purposes,” Wickremesi­nghe, 73, said Sunday in an exclusive interview with e Yomiuri Shimbun at the President’s House in Colombo.

His statement was apparently aimed at allaying fears in India and the United States about China’s increasing maritime presence in the Indo-Paci c.

Wickremesi­nghe was speaking ahead of the arrival of a Chinese research ship, which docked at Hambantota on Tuesday.

e port was developed as part of China’s Belt and Road Initiative, but Colombo leased the port to Beijing in 2017 because it became unable to pay back the loan.

Wickremesi­nghe emphasized that there was no problem with loaning the port to China, saying, “is is nothing new.” He pointed out that countries such as Australia and South Africa have also leased harbors.

e Hambantota port was funded largely by Chinese interest loans. According to o cial data from the

Sri Lankan government, China is Sri Lanka’s largest provider of foreign debt. Struggling to repay what it owes, Colombo has leased the southern port to Chinese state-owned enterprise­s for 99 years.

Sri Lanka can be said to have fallen into a debt trap, sinking deeply into debt before e ectively handing over the port’s control to China.

India, the United States and other countries are concerned that Hambantota port, which is a key tra c hub in the Indo-Paci c, could become a military foothold for China.

“e present ship [scheduled to dock Tuesday] did not come under the category of military. [It] came under the category of a research ship.

at is how [we] permitted the ship to come to Hambantota,” Wickremesi­nghe said, indicating his stance to maintain certain ties with China.

Sri Lanka is in a serious economic crisis due to a shortage of foreign currency. e president said he intended to nalize talks with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund over a bailout by the end of August.

“We will also start the discussion­s with our creditors ... China, India and Japan are the largest creditors,” he said.

Wickremesi­nghe was elected president on July 20, following the resignatio­n of former President Mahinda Rajapaksa, who ed the country amid the turmoil caused by the economic crisis. (Aug. 17)

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