Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

LKI experts speak on Indian Ocean Order at Chatham House, UK

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Lakshman Kadirgamar Institute of Internatio­nal Relations and Strategic Studies (LKI) Executive Director Dr. Ganeshan Wignaraja and former LKI Executive Director and Nonresiden­t Fellow Dr. Dinusha Panditarat­ne recently delivered a joint presentati­on at The Royal Institute of Internatio­nal Affairs – also known as Chatham House.

They were invited to provide a Sri Lankan perspectiv­e on ‘Challenges of a Rules-based Order in the Indian Ocean’, on April 26, 2019, in London, before a roundtable audience of policymake­rs, diplomats and academics in the UK.

The Indian Ocean—one of the world’s busiest trade routes fuelled by China’s rapid growth—is at risk of becoming a less stable and governable space. Speaking from the perspectiv­e of Sri Lanka—a smaller littoral state that aspires to become an economic hub in the Indian Ocean—dr. Wignaraja and Dr. Panditarat­ne outlined threats facing the region, assessed the adequacy of existing internatio­nal arrangemen­ts to address them and considered what could be done to strengthen

the rules-based order in the Indian Ocean alongside its developmen­t as a zone of trade.

Dr. Wignaraja mapped the growth trajectory of the Indian Ocean and spoke on the untapped economic potential of the Indian Ocean region. The rapidly growing Indian Ocean economy accounts for about one-fifth of global GDP and land area and is projected to become a global growth pole by 2025.

He then discussed how the strategica­lly located Sri Lanka can exploit the opportunit­ies from an expanding Indian Ocean economy and recover from the Easter Sunday attacks. Dr. Wignaraja called for a comprehens­ive national response that involves an integrated set of security, governance and developmen­t policies.

Dr. Panditarat­ne spoke on the risks to a stable and prosperous Indian Ocean. These include (i) intensifyi­ng ‘great power’ rivalry in the Indian Ocean, (ii) regional challenges of depleting environmen­tal resources, smuggling and violent extremism and (iii) suboptimal national governance systems among some Indian Ocean states.

She noted that while Sri Lanka is pursuing a rules-based order in the Indian Ocean to deal with great power rivalry and regional challenges, this pursuit first requires a strong rules-based system in the national context.

The event was attended by Sri Lanka’s High Commission­er to the UK Manisha Gunasekera and Deputy Chief of Mission, along with a range of government­al and non-government­al experts in the UK, whose work focuses on Sri Lanka, South Asia and the Indian Ocean region. The presentati­ons were followed by an active and informed discussion among the audience, chaired by Chatham House Asia-pacific Programme Head Dr. Champa Patel.

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