Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Sri Lanka to ink JV with Chinese firm to develop southern port

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REUTERS: Sri Lanka will take part in a joint venture with China Merchants Port Holdings Company Limited to develop a port in its South, where China has also been offered an investment zone.

The Cabinet approved a plan under which Sri Lanka will lease 80 percent of the Hambantota port to Hong Kong-based China Merchants Port Holdings Company for 99 years for US $1.12 billion, a government document showed.

China Merchants Port Holdings Company will make a US $5 million payment as a security deposit upon signing the agreement, which the government expects to do on January 7.

The company will pay 10 percent of the US $1.12 billion within one month, and the remaining 90 percent within six months of signing the transactio­n documents.

Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe had offered during a visit to China in April to swap equity in Sri Lankan infrastruc­ture projects against some of the US $8 billion in debt the Indian Ocean island owes to China.

The port was built with the help of Chinese loans and contractor­s in 2010 under former, China-friendly President Mahinda Rajapaksa, as part of efforts to develop the country’s infrastruc­ture after ending a 26-year war in 2009.

But the port and a nearby airport, also built with Chinese finance, are seen as white elephants because they are not proving financiall­y viable, the government has said.

China’s interest in the port may reflect its ambition to build a ‘Maritime Silk Route’ to the oil-rich Middle East and onwards to Europe.

That makes some countries, including India and the United States, nervous, with Sri Lankasitti­ng near shipping lanes through which much of the world’s trade passes en route to China and Japan.

Finance Minister Ravi Karunanaya­ke in October said the government was in final talks with Chinese investors over setting up a 15,000-acre (6,100 hectare) investment zone near the port.

President Maithripaa­la Sirisena had suspended most Chinese infrastruc­ture projects, including a US $1.4 billion luxury property deal, allegedly because proper procedures had not been followed or costs had been inflated under his predecesso­r.

But faced with a debt and balance-ofpayments crisis, the new government eventually allowed all the projects to go ahead.

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