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
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Wednesday, September 27, 2017
Sri Lanka: Are We Trailing Behind the Belt and Road?
Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) is one of their newest development strategies launched in 2013, although economic cooperation goes back to several years or decades.
by Laksiri Fernando-
( September 25, 2017, Sydney, Sri Lanka Guardian) When
the new government came to office in January 2015, followed by August
elections, it had misgivings about the previous regime having dubious
connections with some Chinese companies. On that premise, all Chinese
projects, investments and loans were suspected. During the heated
election campaign, there were promises given to review, halt or overturn
some of the major projects; Colombo Port City and Hambantota Port being
the main ones. It is also true that some sections of the new government
was utilizing the opportunity to change the foreign policy more towards
the West.
One valid reason for this orientation was the concern about democracy,
reconciliation and human rights. However, that cannot be the whole
concern in a developing country like Sri Lanka. Economic development
itself should be a major priority. Unless the economy and living
standards develop; democracy, reconciliation or human rights cannot be
achieved or sustained.
A Lacunae
One main defect in Sri Lanka’s economic strategy or external relations
is the lack of broad national policies on key issues. It is true that in
a democratic party system, one cannot expect all or even the main
parties to follow the same policy. That is not necessary and in fact
unhealthy. However, there should be broad ‘national policies’
particularly in respect of external relations, both in politics and
economics. Sri Lanka today ostensibly is in a better position to achieve
that given the UNP and the official SLFP are in the same government.
Yet, do we have such a framework? Or do we have other external
constraints to achieve such?
Sri Lanka of course should not emulate China in politics, although China
is changing. Sri Lanka has inherited and followed the ‘Western’
democratic institutions and those should be considered ‘universal,’ as
products of human civilization. However, not following China in politics
should not be a constraint to follow or benefit out of China’s economic
progress. This should not be an opportunistic venture, but a genuine
effort to economically cooperate. This is also not a restriction to
cooperate with other countries particularly with India. A Chindia
(China-India) policy might be the best.
China does not demand or has not demanded, any country to cooperate
economically only with her. Their offers are open ended, while it is
understandable that they would try naturally to safeguard their
interests. It is up to the cooperating countries, and Sri Lanka in this
case, to bargain for our own interests. However, given their enormous
external resources, they could be magnanimous, particularly to
developing and small countries. China is increasingly using common
international vocabulary in their statements such as ‘win-win
solutions,’ ‘democracy,’ ‘rule of law’ and ‘reconciliation.’ They often
refer to the ‘international community.’ NGOs are a newest addition. They
may have their own interpretations on some of them, but emphasis on
‘harmony,’ instead of ‘confrontation,’ is one of their traditional
civilizational goals.
Belt and Road
Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) is one of their newest development
strategies launched in 2013, although economic cooperation goes back to
several years or decades. China has become the world champion of
economic globalization today while many of the Western countries are now
retreating from their own initiatives. This is one reason why a country
like Sri Lanka cannot rely too much on FDI (foreign direct investments)
from the West any longer. Of course the possibilities are there from
India, however BRI is completely a different initiative, strategically
important to Sri Lanka. The following is what a former Ambassador to
China, Nihal Rodrigo, said well before the BRI, in 2009 at a conference.
“Sri
Lanka has, for centuries, been a major mid-point in the Silk Route of
the Sea which linked it with the East and the West – links which
continues to develop.”
Therefore, for our own benefit, BRI is strategically important.
Obviously, it is not so much of the Belt that is important to Sri Lanka
but the Road. While the Belt is a land route with several corridors, the
Road is several maritime trade routes, the main one being via or near
Sri Lanka. Map 1 gives a rough idea about the BRI.
China is well known in the world history for its Great Wall. I think I
came to know about it in grade three. That was built several centuries
ago to prevent invasions from cavalry nomads from central Asia. Later
on, China invented the Silk Route to promote trade, instead of war, even
with those nomadic communities. It was the same idea that was extended
as the maritime Silk Road connecting China, through Southeast and South
Asia to the Gulf. On our part, it was also called the Spice Road,
towards the West. Tamil Nadu also played a major role in this route.
However, this was abandoned due to both internal and external reasons,
but the route existed benefitting (or harming) Sri Lanka. Many counties
in this route, on the Eastern side, were of rice eating people like us.
Those days, the main trading product of China was silk. While men tilled
the land, women raised mulberry trees and extracted silk fibre from the
mulberry worm in the cocoon. Silk textile was a major product. Today,
China is into many other merchandises (not always so perfect) and it is a
large market for other countries, although Sri Lanka has not yet
utilized the potential. It is in 1952, sixty five years ago, that Sri
Lanka entered into the famous Rubber-Rice Pact, favourable to our
country, although trade did not expand satisfactorily thereafter.
Trading and commercial skills are something Sri Lankans are terribly
lacking, much to be learn from the Chinese.
Despite John Kotalawala’s snub against Zhou Enlai during the Bandung
conference (1955), China has maintained a favourable disposition towards
Sri Lanka continuously. Sri Lanka was one of the first countries to
recognize China after the revolution, along with India. It was
Jawaharlal Nehru who was on Zhou Enlai’s side when that uncivilized snub
happened. A few years back, I met a Chinese academic at the University
of Sydney, who said she was a small girl to give a bouquet to Sirimavo
Bandaranaike at an official reception when the latter visited China in
1972. She was fascinated about Sirimavo’s saree!
BRI Deliverables
Colombo Port City or Hambantota is not all about the Belt and Road
initiative. The vision and the strategy are much more profound. Some
critics have argued that it is too ambitious; but that is pure
speculation and should not be our present concern. It was unfortunate
that after the government change in 2015, many Chinese projects became
temporarily halted, even affecting the growth rate adversely. This was
due to the absence of common national policies, and/or agreed standards
in undertaking such projects. In a bizarre turn, when the new government
wanted to proceed with them, the supporters of the last government
violently protested.
There can’t be much doubt that some people in the last government
profited out of these projects allegedly taking commissions from Chinese
companies. The China connection also was utilized for political
purposes. This can happen under any government. What is necessary is to
have strict standards on our part, making known them to the Chinese
partners. A distinction also should be made between Chinese companies
and the Chinese government.
My main point is about the Belt and Road Forum (BRF) held in Beijing on
14-15 May this year, and whether we have utilized the opportunity for
the maximum benefit. At the Forum, China has pledged $ 40 billion for
both Belt and Road; $25 billion being for the Road. I am quoting from
the Council on Foreign Relations. China has also identified 270
deliverables, under five key areas, and 68 countries and international
organizations have signed different agreements under them. It was
unfortunate that India could not or did not participate at the Forum
because of the controversial China-Pakistan Corridor which supposed to
run through the disputed Kashmir. This might be sorted out amicably in
the future, and that should not be a reason for Sri Lanka to become
hesitant on the BRI. Sri Lanka even could play a role in sorting it out
like what Mrs Bandaranaike attempted in 1962.
The five key areas of the BRI at present are as follows: (1)
Connectivity of Development Policies and Strategies. (2) Project
Cooperation for Infrastructure Connectivity. (3) Industrial Investment
and Trade Connectivity. (4) Financial Cooperation and Financial
Connectivity. (5) Peoples Livelihood and People to People Exchange.
There are countries who have signed agreements in all these areas, and
some more than one in a single area. It is not only Asian governments
who have signed agreements. The prominent others include many of the
Eastern European countries, Russia, EU and countries like Greece,
Netherlands and Switzerland. Of course signing agreements is not the
most important, unless those are with deliverable capacity. For example,
during President CBK’s visit in September 2005 to Beijing, there was an
agreement to set up Confucius Institute/s, however the first one was
inaugurated only in 2007 (University of Kelaniya) and the second last
year at the University of Colombo. Those days the emphasis was more on
cultural cooperation.
Are We Lagging Behind?
XinhuaNet (15 May) has listed all 270 agreements as deliverables with
monies earmarked in some cases, in general terms. Some however should be
understood as credit and loans. Sri Lanka has signed 5 of them: 1 under
Project Cooperation for Infrastructure Connectivity; 3 under Industrial
Investment and Trade Connectivity; and 1 under Financial Cooperation
and Financial Connectivity. These are undoubtedly important, but most of
them appear formalization of what have already agreed upon i.e.
Hambantota. Sri Lanka has also signed an additional Concessionary
Agreement in July to develop Hambantota.
What might be significantly absent is a MOU on BRI itself, under the
first category. The government to government MOUs in this category are
with Mongolia, Pakistan, Nepal, Croatia, Montenegro, Hungary, Cambodia,
Lao PDR, Bosnia and Herzegovina, Albania, Timor-Leste, Singapore,
Myanmar and Malaysia. Sri Lanka is missing here. The Chinese government
also has signed cooperate documents under this category with most of the
multilateral organizations such as UNDP, WHO, WIPO, UNPF etc.
Two agreements that Sri Lanka has signed with the Chinese government on
(1) Economic and Trade Cooperation and (2) Promotion of Investment and
Economic Cooperation, under category three, can be considered the most
important, if they are followed up properly. Other three are ministry to
ministry or institution to institution agreements.
Another area Sri Lanka has apparently missed out is on ‘Peoples
Livelihood and People to People Exchange.’ The declared objectives of
‘peoples livelihood’ are quite broad from emergency to poverty
alleviation, and basic needs. The funds allocated are also not small,
and not loans. Many of the offers in this area could have been utilized
for rehabilitation and reconstruction in the North and the East.
China’s BRI does not limit to governments or investment projects. There
has also been a non-governmental (NGO) area emphasized at the Forum.
With 80 member organizations, China NGO Network for International
Exchange has sought ‘people to people’ exchange and networking. China
appears to emulate some Western countries in this respect, and it is a
welcome move. Sri Lanka or its NGO sector also seems to have missed out
in this initiative.