The Japan News by The Yomiuri Shimbun

Concerns grow over ‘Chinese ports’ developed overseas through debt traps

- (From e Yomiuri Shimbun, Aug. 18, 2022)

It can be said that concerns about China’s military use of other countries’ ports and other facilities in exchange for its economic assistance to developing countries are becoming a reality.

A Chinese survey ship has docked at the port of Hambantota in southern Sri Lanka.

The ship belongs to an organizati­on affiliated with the Chinese military and has the ability to track and monitor with high-performanc­e radars such things as satellites, rockets and ballistic missiles.

China describes the ship as a maritime research vessel and claims that it “does not a ect the security or economic interests of any country.” However, given that the survey ship belongs to the military, it may be clear that the port call is part of a military operation.

It is quite natural that Sri Lanka’s neighbor India is concerned about its military activities being monitored by China. e Indian media is calling the vessel a “spy ship.” A Chinese ship’s port call could become another ash point in the China-India con ict.

Located in the Indian Ocean, which connects Asia with the Middle East and Europe, Sri Lanka is a hub for sea-lanes that carry crude oil and other materials. For Japan, the United States, Australia and India, which advocate a “free and open Indo-Paci c,” China’s moves underminin­g regional stability cannot be overlooked.

e port of Hambantota was developed through Chinese investment as part of China’s Belt and Road Initiative to create a huge economic bloc. Struggling to repay its massive debts, Sri Lanka transferre­d the operating rights of the port to a Chinese company, e ectively turning it into a “Chinese port.”

e reason Sri Lanka allowed the Chinese ship to call at the port despite India’s prior opposition may have been that Sri Lanka could not resist pressure from China against the backdrop of its moves to expand its interests in the country.

Sri Lanka’s economic crisis continues. In July, antigovern­ment protests spread and a pro-China president was ousted. China has been reluctant to o er debt relief or other assistance during this time.

is situation highlights the fact that

China’s huge amounts of aid and investment are mainly used to increase its own in uence, not for the developmen­t of the other country.

It is not only Sri Lanka that has fallen into a “debt trap,” in which developing countries are saddled with debts and China obtains the rights to use local infrastruc­ture. In neighborin­g Pakistan, Bangladesh and Myanmar, too, ports are being developed with Chinese funds. Countries should be more vigilant.

China has defended the Russian invasion of Ukraine and is also changing the status quo by violating its boundaries with Taiwan. It is far from being a major power that leads the stability of internatio­nal politics and the global economy.

Japan and the United States continue to provide aid that contribute­s to the developmen­t and growth of human resources in other countries. e two nations need to promote their highly transparen­t assistance to developing countries.

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