Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Gota would restore relations with China, says adviser

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(Colombo) REUTERS:

Sri Lankan presidenti­al nominee Gotabaya Rajapaksa would ‘restore relations’ with the country’s top lender China if he wins the Nov. 16 vote and met with a senior Chinese official this week, according to an adviser and his spokesman.

China and Sri Lanka’s already strained relations took a further blow on last Monday when President Maithripal­a Sirisena alleged corruption at a Chinese company contracted to build the Lotus Tower, South Asia’s tallest tower.

A Sri Lankan parliament­ary panel said it would investigat­e.

Neither the company nor the Chinese embassy in Colombo has commented on Sirisena’s allegation­s. China has repeatedly denied any wrongdoing in its multibilli­on dollar infrastruc­ture projects in Sri Lanka. “Now China s looking at s differentl­y.

When Gotabaya Rajapaksa becomes the president... he will set the record right and restore the relationsh­ip to where it was,” Rajapaksa’s adviser Palitha Kohona told reporters in Colombo. “I suppose the thinking was if we upset China, the West would come to us with endless bags of gold... But the bags of gold never materializ­ed,” Kohona said.

Ties between Colombo and Beijing soured when, upon his election in 2015, Sirisena suspended all Chinese investment projects, citing allegation­s of corruption, overpricin­g and flouting of government procedures. He allowed projects to resume the following year after demanding changes in some.

Rajapaksa’s spokesman said on Friday that the Opposition politician, whose candidatur­e has yet to be confirmed, and his brother, former President Mahinda Rajapaksa, met this week with Chen Min’er, a leader of the Communist Party of China (CPC) and a close ally of President Xi Jinping, to discuss future ties.

Spokesman Keheliya Rambukwell­a said that at the meeting Chen pledged China’s support for the Sri Lankan government’s future endeavours.

Rajapaksa is widely seen as the frontrunne­r in November’s election due to his popularity among Sri Lanka’s Sinhala Buddhist majority for his role in ending a 26-year civil war in 2009.

However, his candidatur­e is yet to be confirmed, with uncertaint­ies lingering over a legal battle related to misappropr­iation of funds and his renunciati­on of U.S. citizenshi­p. Sri Lanka does not allow dual citizens to contest elections.

Rajapaksa has denied wrongdoing and says he has already renounced his citizenshi­p.

 ??  ?? Gotabaya Rajapaksa
Gotabaya Rajapaksa
 ??  ?? Palitha Kohona
Palitha Kohona

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