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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Monday, April 6, 2015
Did China profit from corrupt Sri Lanka deals?
How Sri Lanka plans to stamp out corruption
By Andrew Stevens @CNNMoney
April 2, 2015: 9:38 PM ET
It's the kind of project that can make a legacy: A massive port complex, complete with luxury hotels and fancy shops, constructed on an artificial island.
Mahinda Rajapaksa, the former president of Sri Lanka, was the driving
force behind such a project, a $1.4 billion crown jewel to be built near
Colombo by a state-backed Chinese construction firm.
But in the three months since Rajapaksa was unseated in an election
stunner, the project has been put on hold, and allegations of possible
corruption in the bidding process have tarnished the former president’s
reputation.
Sri Lanka’s new president, Maithripala Sirisena, has directed his
administration to investigate all deals signed by the previous
government, looking for irregularities in contract negotiations.
Sirisena’s government claims that many deals signed during the former
president’s rule, like the Port City project, did not go through the
proper approval process. The number of deals under review is likely in
the hundreds, worth billions of dollars.
Chinese companies are at the center of the storm. Rajapaksa had worked
to develop close ties with Beijing, often at the expense of relations
with New Delhi and the West. During his administration, Chinese firms
won lucrative contracts to build roads, bridges and other large
projects.
Sri Lanka’s new finance minister, Ravi Karunanayake, didn’t pull any
punches on the matter, telling CNN that many infrastructure deals
involving Chinese firms are suspect.
"The Chinese companies used the opportunity of a corrupt regime to crowd
out other companies coming in," he said. "There was no even playing
field."
Bridges were built where there were no rivers, he said. Airports were
constructed in the middle of nowhere. “That was the type of corruption
that was going on,” he said.
Asked which deals were tainted by corruption, Karunanayake replied with a question of his own: “Which deals weren’t?”
Rajapaksa, the former president, was not able to be reached for comment.
But in an interview with the South China Morning Post, he defended his
actions and said China was being used as a political scapegoat.
"I wanted development for Sri Lanka and China was the only one which had
the resources and the inclination to help me," he said. "They should be
thankful to China for the help they extended; instead these people are
treating China like a criminal."
China’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs did not respond to a request for comment.
Sri Lanka, traditionally seen as being in India’s sphere of influence, is strategically important to both New Delhi and Beijing.
While it has put the Port City project on hold, the new administration
is keen to stress that its close ties to China remain intact. Sirisena
traveled to China within two months of being sworn in, and Beijing has
pledged around $1 billion in new grants.
Karunanayake described the current relationship with Beijing as “very warm.”
"It wasn’t just Chinese companies," Karunanayake said. "It was basically
anybody who achieved their objective, to get money in their pockets."
Still, the new leadership is keen to re-balance Sri Lanka’s international partnerships.
"We now have an open invitation to the world. We would like to see
anybody good bringing the best of investments to Sri Lanka," the new
finance minister said.
"It could be India, China, the U.S., Europe, Myanmar, Maldives," he
said. "We want a clean, transparent and accountable approach, which
helps people to see ‘yes the rule of law works in Sri Lanka.’ "
The new government itself has pledged to stamp out corruption at government level within its first 100 days.
"We too have to walk the talk," said Karunanayake.