A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, April 2, 2013
The Tiger, Sri Lanka’s Asiatic Lion And The China’s Dragon
By Charitha
Ratwatte -April 1, 2013
Nigeria’s Central Bank
Governor recently commented that “Africa must shake off its romantic view of
China and accept Beijing as a competitor as much as a partner capable of the
same exploitative practices as the old European colonial powers.”
Their
effect on Lanka’s Asiatic Lion
Nigeria’s
Central Bank Governor recently commented that “Africa must shake off its
romantic view of China and accept Beijing as a competitor as much as a partner
capable of the same exploitative practices as the old European colonial
powers.”
Governor
Lamido Sanusi reflects the growing number of senior African bureaucrats who fear
that Africa’s emerging industries are being drowned in a sea of cheap industrial
products from China. He further said: “Africa is opening itself up to a new form
of imperialism, China takes from us primary goods and sells us manufactured
ones. This was also the essence of colonialism.”
In 2012, trade between China and Africa totalled US$ 200 billion. Up by 20 times to what it was in 2000, when China first committed itself to a policy of accelerated engagement with the African continent. An estimated one million Chinese are today resident in Africa, up from a few thousand a decade ago.
Sanusi goes on: “China is no longer ‘a fellow underdeveloped economy’; China is the second largest economy in the world, an economic giant capable of the same forms of exploitation as the West. China is a major contributor to the de-industrialisation of Africa and thus African underdevelopment.”
In 2012, trade between China and Africa totalled US$ 200 billion. Up by 20 times to what it was in 2000, when China first committed itself to a policy of accelerated engagement with the African continent. An estimated one million Chinese are today resident in Africa, up from a few thousand a decade ago.
Sanusi goes on: “China is no longer ‘a fellow underdeveloped economy’; China is the second largest economy in the world, an economic giant capable of the same forms of exploitation as the West. China is a major contributor to the de-industrialisation of Africa and thus African underdevelopment.”
Predatory
trade practices
Sanusi
says that Africa must respond to Chinese predatory trade practices such as
currency manipulation and subsidies, which gives Chinese exports an advantage.
He comments: “The days of the Non Aligned Movement that united emerging nations
after colonialism are long gone. Africa must realise that China – like the US,
Russia, Britain and Brazil and the rest – is in Africa not for African interests
but its own. Engagement must be on terms that allow the Chinese to make money
while developing the continent, such as incentives to set up manufacturing on
African soil and policies to ensure employment of Africans.”
Between
Africa’s Sahara desert (in the North) and the Kalahari Desert (in the South) lie
many of the raw materials desired by China based industries. 90% of Chinese
imports from Africa are minerals. 30% of Africa’s imports from China are
machinery and electrical goods, textiles, chemicals and plastics and rubber.
China is Africa’s top business partner, with trade exceeding US$ 166
billion.
China’s
Trade Minister Chen Deming says China’s direct investment in Africa exceeds US$
14.7 billion. Chinese funds also flow into Africa from tax havens the world
over, totalling altogether over US$ 40 billion, according to China’s Ambassador
to South Africa. The Dragon and the Lion are certainly engaged.
Chinese
domination
Before
the European imperialists arrived in Asia it was China which dominated the Asian
continent. In the Sung era (960-1126), the Chinese had a massive bout of
technological innovation, gun powder; movable type and sternpost were all
discovered. This resulted in a huge surge of economic activity in the 10th to
the 13th centuries.
The
discovery and adoption of a variety of rice which permitted two crops a year
from well-irrigated land led to massive surpluses being produced. On the
industrial side, one scholar estimates within a few years of the battle of
Hastings in England (1066), China was producing as much iron ore as the whole of
Europe centuries later.
When
Italian adventurer Marco Polo was in China at the end of the 13th century – ‘a
sort of black stone’ – coal was being burnt for providing heat. Chinese sailors
in Sung dynasty times already used the magnetic compass. Naval expeditions were
using huge seagoing sampans to reach the Persian Gulf, Aden and East Africa in
the 15th century.
Admiral
Cheng Ho arrived in Galle in 1410 with a fleet and kidnapped the local ruler and
his family and left behind a plaque in Chinese, Tamil and Persian commemorating
his visit. It is now in the Galle Maritime Museum. Gavin Menzies in his book
‘1421 – the Year the Chinese discovered the World,’ says that there is evidence
that Admiral Cheng’s fleet sailed West from Galle to Calicut and on across the
Indian Ocean to Malindi on Africa’s East coast and Sofala near Madagascar and
even rounded the Cape. This was the height of Chinese oceanic
power.
Thereafter China turned inwards – the Confucian tradition, the overconfidence and arrogance buttressed by great resources and remoteness, made it difficult for China to learn from outside. In the early 15th century the Ming dynasty by imperial decree forbade Chinese ships to sail beyond coastal waters. Chinese shipyards lost the technological capacity to build the big oceangoing sampans. Admiral Cheng Ho’s ground breaking voyages were forgotten.
Thereafter China turned inwards – the Confucian tradition, the overconfidence and arrogance buttressed by great resources and remoteness, made it difficult for China to learn from outside. In the early 15th century the Ming dynasty by imperial decree forbade Chinese ships to sail beyond coastal waters. Chinese shipyards lost the technological capacity to build the big oceangoing sampans. Admiral Cheng Ho’s ground breaking voyages were forgotten.
This
vacuum was filled by European explorers who heralded the European colonisation
of Asia, in search of spices. They were competing with Arab traders who held the
monopoly up to then. On the Indian subcontinent also there was no large naval
power, compared with the Cholas or East Asia’s Sri Vijaya empires of earlier
times. From around 1500 to the time of World War II, Europeans dominated the sea
lanes of Asia. The Dragon was caged.
Asian
imperialists
There
always have been apprehensions over Asian imperialists. As way back in 1947,
Ceylon expressed concerns over domination of Asia generally and South Asia
specifically by India’s Tiger and China’s Dragon. The issue was raised at the
Asian Relations Conference held at New Delhi in March-April 1947. The Ceylonese
delegation expressed concerns that small countries in Asia might be faced with
aggression, not necessarily political, but economic and demographic, by their
big brothers like China and India.
Ceylon
was at the time was having a running battle with India over the nationality of
the Indian plantation workers and traders living in the island. Although China
had made assurances that Chinese immigrant communities would never seek
political power in other Asian states they were resident in, the subsequent
history of Malaysia, Singapore, Philippines, Indonesia and Thailand, present a
contrary story.
The Burmese delegation spoke of apprehensions of Brown or Yellow exploitation replacing White colonial exploitation. As Mao famously said “there is nothing new under the sun,” these issues still dominate the region.
The Burmese delegation spoke of apprehensions of Brown or Yellow exploitation replacing White colonial exploitation. As Mao famously said “there is nothing new under the sun,” these issues still dominate the region.
BRICSa
rising
International
economists have been for some time heralding the rise of the BRIC countries –
Brazil, Russia, India and China – and the very aggressive role they are playing
in wielding influence among the world’s poorer developing nations. The term was
coined by Jim O’Neill of Goldman Sachs.
The
BRICs matter because of their economic weight; they are the four largest
economies outside the OECD. They are the only developing economies with annual
GDPs of over $ 1 trillion. Other than Russia they sustained better growth than
other countries during the recent recession. China has become the world’s
largest exporter.
Intra
BRIC trade has soared: Chinese-Indian trade is projected to reach $ 60 billion
in 2010. China spewed 6.5 billion tons of carbon monoxide into the atmosphere in
2008, the world’s largest, Russia is third and India fourth. All four BRICS are
among the world’s largest accumulators of foreign reserves, accounting for 40%
of the world’s total.
Today
the Republic of South Africa has joined the BRIC club, further strengthening the
grouping. BRICSa leaders met recently in South Africa with their finance
ministers to plan a BRICSa Bank, to rival the World Bank and ADB.
In
the Cold War days, the third world was the exclusive playground of the USA and
the USSR in competition, which led to poor countries taking cover with the
Non-Aligned Movement, which was led by, among others, India, Sri Lanka, Cuba,
Yugoslavia and Libya.
The
Non-Aligned Movement itself does not seem to have comprehended that change is
the only constant in the real world, as so brilliantly expounded 25 centuries
ago by India’s greatest son, Gautama Siddhartha the Buddha at the Deer Park at
Saranath in India, today’s Sahet Mahet.
China’s
Dragon and India’s Tiger
Within
the BRICSa grouping China’s Dragon and India’s Tiger are playing a particularly
unique role. China’s rise as an economic powerhouse was preordained from the day
Deng Hsiao Ping unshackled the economy in 1979.
Chinese capitalism re-manifested itself, last seen in the pre-revolutionary days in Shanghai and Hong Kong, private businesses, affluent consumers, humming export factories, stock markets which are the darling of investors and Chinese bureaucrats and officials in business suits, a change from Mao’s tunic.
Chinese capitalism re-manifested itself, last seen in the pre-revolutionary days in Shanghai and Hong Kong, private businesses, affluent consumers, humming export factories, stock markets which are the darling of investors and Chinese bureaucrats and officials in business suits, a change from Mao’s tunic.
The
China price is something no other nation-based manufacturer can match, as the
Shanghai World Trade Fair shows. China, however, has abandoned Deng’s advice
‘China should adopt a low profile and never take the lead’ for a much more
aggressive international posture. The Dragon unleashed.
But
there are some signs that the Dragon is ageing – the one child policy also had
taken the edge out of the China low cost labour. Reforms enabling farmers to
cultivate land independently, as against the old commune system, and the ability
to sell the crop for a market price, discourages rural folk from seeking jobs in
coastal factories.
The
Indian Tiger’s rise was much more gradual. From the time, the troika of Finance
Minister Chidambaram (currently Finance Minister again – some say potential PM),
and Finance Ministry officials, Man Mohan Singh (current Prime Minister) and
Montek Ahluwalia (current Deputy Chairman of the National Planning Commission)
convinced Prime Minister Narasimha Rao (a scholar who knew 16 languages) to open
up the Indian economy, the rise has been slow and sure, with some dips.
It
has been said that “in India there are no full stops, only commas!” Indeed
Delhi’s chatterati quipped that the PM actually had said, “I am not personally
enough of an economist to judge for myself, but I am convinced that if all three
of you agree on this, it must the only way forward!”
Business
Week commented: “Rarely has the economic ascent of two still relatively poor
nations been watched with such a mixture of awe, opportunism and trepidation.
The post war era witnessed the economic miracles in Japan and South Korea. But
neither was populous enough to power worldwide growth or change the game in a
complete spectrum of industries. China and India by contrast, possess the weight
and dynamism to transform the 21st century global economy… Never has the world
seen the simultaneous, sustained takeoffs of two nations that together account
for one third of the planet’s population.”
India
and Sri Lanka
Surviving
in the shadow of the Indian Tiger has been and always will be a necessary evil
for all South Asian countries. This has been so since time immemorial. Sri
Lanka’s rulers and pseudo rulers have polished the art of playing up to Big
Brother and surviving by exploiting India’s phobias, both real and imagined, to
a supreme level; it is the essence of the very survival of the nation
state.
One
need not go back to ancient history of the visit of the traders Thappassu and
Bhalluka to Tiriyaya, Arahat Mahinda Thero, Sanghamitta Theri and the Shri Maha
Bodhiya sapling, the Chola invasions, the Nayakkar kings of the Kandyan Kingdom
and before. D.S. Senanayake entering into the British Bases Agreement and
S.W.R.D. Bandaranayake abrogating it, Kachchativu, the Sirima Shastri Pact,
Rohana Wijeweera’s lecture on Indian Expansionism (one of only five), Indian
assistance in 1971, Sri Lanka permitting Pakistani troops to be ferried to East
Pakistan through Colombo in “civilian” PIA aircraft during the Bangladesh
liberation war, the nexus between Prime Minister Indira Gandhi, RAW and
Prabhakaran’s LTTE, Rajiv Gandhi and J.R. Jayewardene’s Indo Lanka Agreement and
the 13th Amendment to the Sri Lanka Constitution and the IPKF, assassination of
Rajiv by the LTTE, Chief Minister Vartharaja Perumal’s Tamil National Army, the
regular pilgrimages to pay obeisance to the regional viceroys in New Delhi by
Sri Lankan Presidents, Prime Ministers, Ministers and bureaucrats, on which
Nanda Godage, formerly of the SL Foreign Service, who has served at the regional
viceroys court, has commented adversely upon.
The
recent shenanigans at the UNHRC at Geneva and the grandstanding in Chennai by
the DMK and the assaults on Sri Lankans, the raid on DMK’s M.K. Stalin’s
residence by the India CBI, the banning of Sri Lanka cricketers from IPL matches
in Chennai, are all part of the interplay.
China
and Sri Lanka
The
Chinese Dragon’s influence is more recent, if Admiral Cheng Ho’s visit in 1410
is discounted. But in ancient times there have been contacts – the earliest
recorded mission from China to Sri Lanka took place during the time of the Han
dynasty’s Emperor Ping (1-6 CE). Between the first and 10th centuries, Sri
Lanka’s kings, it is recorded, sent at least 10 missions to the Middle
Kingdom.
In
the fifth century the Buddhist scholar Fa Hsien visited the Maha Vihara in
Anuradhapura, at this time that the Meheni Sasuna was introduced to China from
Sri Lanka. Archaeological evidence at Anuradhapura, Polonnaruwa and especially
Yapahuwa has turned up Chinese artefacts such as ceramic ware and coins
belonging to the Sung dynasty.
It
is thought that Chinese sea going sampans would have berthed at Gokanna, the
modern Trincomalee, and gone cross country to Anuradhapura to trade with traders
from the West, Jews, Moors and Europeans, who also came to Anuradhapura overland
after their vessels docked at Manthai, the modern Mannar. The South West and
North East monsoon winds would have propelled these vessels. Dependence on
monsoon wind power meant that the traders would have been compelled to stay in
Sri Lanka during the inter monsoon period; their prolonged presence would have a
substantial impact.
Anuradhapura
had a separate area for European traders, designated by royal edict and special
taxes were levied on foreign traders, at the ports of Manthai, Gokanna,
Magampura and Anuradhapura. The pair of guardian lions at the bottom of the
ascent of the stairs to Yapahuwa bears a striking resemblance to ancient Chinese
sculptured lions.
Whatever
the ancient history, how can one discount the Rubber Rice Pact, the initiative
to settle the border war between India and China, the BMICH, the assistance
provided in the war against the LTTE, ships, aircraft, weapons and armaments,
NORINCO’s go down at Boosa in Galle of T56s and ammunition, which were supplied
on a payable when able basis, the Nelum Pokuna Centre for the Performing Arts at
the former CMC grounds in Colombo, Hambantota Magampura Harbour, Mattala
Airport, International Conference Centre, Norochcholai, loans, equipment and
grants for ‘Maga Naguma’?
African
Lion and Chinese Dragon
New
Chinese President Xi Jinping, after the BRICSa summit, visited Tanzania and the
Democratic Republic of Congo after South Africa. He spoke of the twinning of the
African Lion with the Chinese Dragon!
China
is the largest donor to Sri Lanka, Myanmar and also Cambodia. China also has
pledge vast assistance programs to Africa. In November 2009, former Prime
Minister Wen pledged $ 10 million in cheap loans over a three-year period, debt
forgiveness, new hospitals, professional training for 15,000 Africans and
doubling of aid.
When
Sudan, not exactly a model state by objective standards of human rights and
governance standards, could not meet a deadline for repaying $ 34 billion in
foreign debt, it turned to China, India and Gulf-based lenders for a bailout.
India also has bailed out Tanzania with special from credits. Between 2008 and
2009 when total Foreign Direct Investment in Africa fell by around 30%, due to
the worldwide recession, the flow of funds from China, albeit starting from a
low base, increased by 80%.
BRICs
as aid donors
BRIC
assistance generally has been criticised by human rights activists, for propping
up rulers who are serial violators of human rights and whose governance
standards are far from acceptable, because most of the aid is tied, the lack of
competitive bidding, negotiated prices, dated technology (highly damaging to the
environment) labour and equipment imported from the donor country.
Further
this ‘assistance’ is more often than not in the form of loans at near commercial
rates, which have to be repaid from national tax revenues years later, if no
debt forgiveness is available; debt forgiveness also creates a culture of
dependence.
But
it is not all not necessarily negative, Deborah Brautigam, in a recent book,
‘China’s Role in Africa,’ says that the emergence of the BRICs as aid donors is
as important for poor countries as was the fall of the Berlin Wall for Eastern
Europe. The BRICSa Bank, notwithstanding the fears of Chinese Dragon’s
domination, will be a game changer in the international finance sector.
In
1431 Admiral Cheng Ho left a prophetic inscription on a memorial stone, on the
banks of the Yangtze estuary: “The countries beyond the horizon and at the ends
of the earth have all become subjects to the most western of the western or the
most northern of the northern countries, however far away they may be.”
Mao was right: “There is nothing new under the sun.” Watch out for the interplay between the Dragon, the Lion and the Tiger; its effect on Sri Lanka’s Asiatic Lion will be decisive.
Mao was right: “There is nothing new under the sun.” Watch out for the interplay between the Dragon, the Lion and the Tiger; its effect on Sri Lanka’s Asiatic Lion will be decisive.