The Pak Banker

China-backed projects testament to Sri Lanka's mismanagem­ent

- HAMBANTOTA, SRI LANKA -AFP

An airport without planes, a revolving restaurant with no diners, a debt-laden seaport-Sri Lanka's economic crisis has been exacerbate­d by Chinese-funded projects that stand as neglected monuments to government extravagan­ce.

The South Asian island nation borrowed heavily to plug years of budget shortfalls and trade deficits, but squandered huge sums on illconside­red infrastruc­ture projects that have further drained public finances.

It is now in the grip of its worst financial crisis since independen­ce from Britain in 1948, with months of blackouts and acute shortages of food and fuel plaguing its 22 million people.

After weeks of largely peaceful protests demanding the government resign over its economic mismanagem­ent, things turned violent Monday after pro-government supporters clashed with demonstrat­ors, leaving five people dead and at least 225 wounded.

Many of the white-elephant projects that helped fuel the crisis now gather dust in Hambantota district, home of the powerful Rajapaksa clan, which used its political clout and billions in Chinese loans in a failed effort to turn the rural outpost into a major economic hub.

Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa-who commission­ed many of the projects-announced his resignatio­n Monday, the same day the antigovern­ment protests turned violent.

But his younger brother Gotabaya remains president. The centrepiec­e of the infrastruc­ture drive was a deep seaport on the world's busiest east-west shipping lane, which was meant to spur industrial activity.

Instead, it has haemorrhag­ed money from the moment it began operations.

"We were very hopeful when the projects were announced, and this area did get better," Dinuka, a long-time resident of Hambantota, told AFP. "But now it means nothing. That port is not ours and we are struggling to live."

The Hambantota port was unable to service the $1.4b in Chinese loans rung up to finance its constructi­on, losing $300 million in six years.

In 2017, a Chinese state-owned company was handed a 99-year lease for the seaport-a deal that sparked concerns across the region that Beijing had secured a strategic toehold in the Indian Ocean.

Overlookin­g the port is another Chinesebac­ked extravagan­ce: a $15.5 million conference centre that has been largely unused since it opened. Nearby is the Rajapaksa Airport, built with a $200 million loan from China, which is so sparingly used that at one point it was unable to cover its electricit­y bill.

In the capital Colombo, there is the Chinesefun­ded Port City project-an artificial 665-acre island set up with the aim of becoming a financial hub rivalling Dubai.

But critics have already sounded off on the project becoming a "hidden debt trap".

Hungarian Prime Minister Viktor Orban on Friday blasted European Commission head Ursula von der Leyen for "attacking" EU unity with a plan to ban Russian oil, saying it crosses a red line and has been sent back.

"The European Commission president, intentiona­lly or unintentio­nally, has attacked the European unity that had been worked out," Orban said on state radio.

"From the first moment we made clear that there will be a red line... they have crossed this red line."

On Wednesday the EU executive proposed to the bloc's 27 members a ban on Russian oil imports in its toughest move yet over Moscow's invasion of Ukraine.

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