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Chinese Premier Li Qiang holds a welcome ceremony for Sri Lankan Prime Minister Dinesh Gunawardena (right) in Beijing on March 26. Photo: Xinhua

Sri Lanka PM says China to develop strategic Hambantota port, Colombo airport

  • Prime Minister Dinesh Gunawardena said Premier Li Qiang had promised Beijing would also help the South Asian nation’s debt restructuring process continuously
  • New Delhi and Washington are concerned that a Chinese foothold at Hambantota could boost its naval advantage in the Indian Ocean
Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka’s prime minister said on Wednesday that China has pledged to develop the island nation’s strategic deep seaport and the capital’s airport after talks with his counterpart in Beijing.

Prime Minister Dinesh Gunawardena said China – the island’s biggest bilateral creditor – would “assist” Sri Lanka’s restructuring of external debt, a key condition to maintaining a US$2.9 billion IMF bailout.

Beijing’s position on debt restructuring has not been made public, but Sri Lankan officials have said China was reluctant to take a haircut on its loans but could extend the tenure and adjust interest rates.

Sri Lanka in 2022 ran out of foreign exchange to finance essential imports and declared a sovereign default on its US$46 billion foreign debt.

Months of protests forced then-president Gotabaya Rajapaksa out of office.

Are China-backed mega projects causing Sri Lanka to face ‘Chinese debt trap’?

Gunawardena’s office said Premier Li Qiang had promised China would “assist Sri Lanka’s debt restructuring process continuously and help Sri Lanka to develop its economy”.

Gunawardena said Beijing had offered “assistance to develop” Colombo International Airport and Hambantota port, the statement added, without giving further details.

A Japanese-funded expansion of Colombo airport had been on hold since Sri Lanka’s sovereign debt default.

The southern seaport of Hambantota was handed to a Chinese state-owned company in 2017 on a 99-year lease for US$1.12 billion, sparking security concerns in Beijing’s regional rival India.
Sri Lanka’s Hambantota port. Photo: AFP

India and the United States are both concerned that a Chinese foothold at Hambantota, on the island’s southern coast, could boost its naval advantage in the Indian Ocean.

Sri Lanka has insisted its ports will not be used for any military purposes, but New Delhi has objected to Chinese research vessels calling at Hambantota fearing that they could be used for espionage.

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