China
Doing a Myanmar in Sri Lanka?
by B. Raman
Is China doing a
Myanmar in Sri Lanka by capitalising on the
policy of President Mahinda Rajapaksa of
diversifying Sri Lanka's geo-political
options even while professing close
friendship with India?
2. That seems to have
been one of the concerns of the Government
of India, which prompted a two-day visit to
Sri Lanka by a team of senior advisers of
Prime Minister Dr. Manmohan Singh consisting
of Shri M. K. Narayanan, the National
Security Adviser, Shri Shivsankar Menon, the
Foreign Secretary, and Shri Vijay Singh, the
Defence Secretary, on June 20 and 21, 2008,
for talks with Mr. Rajapaksa and senior Sri
Lankan officials and important Tamil
leaders.
3. Officially, the
visit was projected as a return visit to
reciprocate a similar high-level visit to
New Delhi in September last by a Sri Lankan
delegation headed by Mr. Gothbaya Rajapaksa,
the Defence Secretary, and as a preparatory
visit before the forthcoming 15th summit of
the South Asian Association for Regional
Co-operation (SAARC) to be held at Colombo
from July 27 to August 3, 2008.
4. Originally, the
summit was to have been held at Kandy where
the security-related problems would have
been less than in Colombo. In March last,
the Sri Lankan Government decided to have it
in Colombo since, in its view, the
infrastructure at Kandy would have been
inadequate to host the summit. The shifting
of the venue to Colombo has enhanced the
security concerns of India.
5. Sri Lanka had
successfully hosted the 6th SAARC summit at
Colombo in 1991 and the 10th in 1998 and had
provided effective security to the leaders
of the participating countries. The 15th
summit will be held at a time when a large
number of the Sri Lankan security forces are
engaged in an operation to re-capture the
control of the Northern Province from the
LTTE. Facing increasing pressure from the
security forces, the LTTE has stepped up
attacks with explosives on soft targets in
areas in and around Colombo. Moreover, its
bringing into action its planes for air
strikes since March last year and the
inability of the Sri Lankan security forces
to identify where these planes are kept and
wherefrom the air attacks are being launched
and to intercept them have made the
pre-summit security scenario in Colombo
worrisome.
6. While the LTTE is
unlikely to target the summit or its
participants, the summit could provide it
with an opportunity to create drama in order
to prove its prowess and disprove the claims
of the Government that the LTTE has been
weakened beyond recovery. Will the Sri
Lankan security forces be in a position to
provide effective security to all the
participants in general and to the Indian
Prime Minister in particular? One of the
purposes of the visit of the Indian team
seems to have been to make an assessment in
answer to this question.
7. Another purpose
seems to have been to assess the
implications to India of Mr. Rajapaksa's
policy of bringing in other external state
actors into Sri Lanka in order to give Sri
Lanka a more geo-political wriggle room. In
the past, India had to worry only about
China, Pakistan and the US. Now, Mr.
Rajapaksa has started courting Iran, Saudi
Arabia and Malaysia. Iran has started
playing an important role in the oil
refining sector and it is only a question of
time before it starts demanding a role in
the retail sale of oil, a sector in which
the Indian Oil Corporation presently has a
pre-eminent role. To counter the fears of
the US and the Sunni Arab states over his
flirting with Iran, he has also been trying
to bring in Saudi Arabia in the oil sector.
Malaysia emerged last year as the largest
foreign investor in Sri Lanka. As a result
of his moves, India is likely to find its
political and economic influence in Sri
Lanka gradually shrinking.
8. In view of India's
improving relations with the US, it is not
concerned as it would have been in the past
over the increasing US activities in Sri
Lanka and the increasing interest of the US
Pacific Command in Sri Lanka. The US Navy is
eyeing Colombo as a fall-back option in case
the continuing use of the Karachi port for
logistics and other purposes becomes
difficult in view of the anti-US feelings in
Pakistan. Presently, India is not highly
concerned with the growing economic ties
between Sri Lanka and Malaysia either. It
can live with it.
9. What India is
concerned is over the increasing activities
of China and Pakistan, the entry of Iran and
the expected entry of Saudi Arabia into Sri
Lanka. While Pakistan's relations with Sri
Lanka are largely focussed on military
supplies and training, China's relations
have greater strategic implications for
India----covering military supplies and
training, the construction of a modern port
at Hambantota in the South and oil
exploration in the Mannar area. The expected
semi-permanent stationing of an increasing
number of Chinese experts in these areas for
carrying out these projects will add to the
concerns of the Indian security bureaucracy.
10. The action of the
Government of Myanmar in allowing the
Chinese to have a semi-permanent presence in
the Coco Islands brought the Chinese within
monitoring distance of India's space
establishments on the Eastern coast. The
semi-permanent presence, which the
Chinese are now getting in Sri Lanka, will
bring them within monitoring distance of
India's fast-breeder reactor complex at
Kalpakam near Chennai, the Russian-aided
Koodankulam nuclear power reactor complex in
southern Tamil Nadu and India's space
establishments in Kerala.
11. Reporting on the
visit of the senior Indian officials to
Colombo, the "Times of India" of June 23,
2008, quoted an unnamed senior Indian
official in New Delhi as stating as follows:
"The story of Myanmar is being repeated in
Sri Lanka. China is already all over the
island nation, with a flurry of arms
deals, oil exploration and construction
projects like the Hambantota port."
12. The "Times of
India" also reported as follows: "Colombo
has signed a US $ 37.6 million deal with the
Beijing-based Poly Technologies for a wide
variety of arms, ammunition, mortars and
bombs. Sri Lanka is also getting some
Chinese Jian-7 fighters, JY 11-3D air
surveillance radars, armoured personnel
carriers, T-56 assault rifles ( a copy of
AK-47), machine guns and anti-aircraft guns,
rocket-propelled grenade launchers and
missiles."
13. The work on the
Hambantota port is progressing fast with
typical Chinese efficiency. Sri Lankan
sources assert that it will be only a
commercial port and not a potential naval
base. One has to wait and see.
14. The Hambantota
port construction is estimated to cost US $
one billion to be lent by the Exim Bank of
China. The entire project is expected to be
completed in 15 years in four phases. The
first phase of construction, which was
started in October, 2007, is estimated
to cost US $450 million. The entire project,
inter alia, provides for the construction
of a gas-fired power plant project, a ship
repair unit, a container repair unit, an oil
refinery and a bunkering terminal. The
bunkering terminal, which is expected to
be completed in 39 months, provides for the
terminal to handle up to 500,000 metric
tonnes (mt) of oil products a year.
15.The "Daily News" of
Sri Lanka reported on June 19, 2008, as
follows: ' A project proposal sent by the
China Huanqiu Contracting and Engineering
Corporation for building the bunkering
facility and tank farm at the Hambantota
harbour has been approved by the project
committee and the cabinet-appointed
negotiations committee. "The total value of
the project would be $76.5 million and it
would be completed by 2010.A set of fuel
tanks, bunkering facilities, aviation fuel
storage facilities and liquefied petroleum
gas (LPG) storage facilities will be built
under the project at Hambantota, about 230
km south of Colombo. The media has also
reported that although the Hambantota port
was initially planned as a service and
industrial port, it is expected to be
developed as a trans-shipment port at a
later stage to handle 20 million containers
per year.
16. Neither India nor
China has so far started oil/gas exploration
work in the one block each in the Mannar
area awarded to them by the Rajapaksa
Government without bidding as a gesture of
goodwill. The Oil and Natural Gas
Corporation (ONGC), which was offered the
block allotted to India without bidding,
said in September last that it was not
interested in the assigned block, due to low
prospectivity and the fact that Sri Lanka
was asking for a big bonus in return for
this gesture. The Sri Lankan
Government said it would negotiate with the
ONGC for a new oil block with greater
prospectivity. It is not known whether the
Chinese are satisfied with the block offered
to them without bidding and, if so, when
they would start the exploration.
17. Foreign oil
companies have not so far been enthusiastic
over the prospects of finding oil/gas in
exploitable quantities in the Mannar area.
Earlier this year, the Sri Lankan Government
invited bids for three blocks. Of these,
block No 1, which extends over an area of
3,338.10 square kilometers and is nearest to
India, received bids from ONGC Videsh, Cairn
India, and Niko Resources of Cyprus. ONGC
Videsh is a subsidiary of the state-owned
Oil and Natural Gas Corporation of
India.Cairn India, is 69 per cent owned by
Cairn Energy of London, which has been
active in India, Nepal and Bangladesh.Canada-based
Niko Resources is active in Canada, India
and Bangladesh. Block No. 2 received bids
from both Cairn India and Niko Resources
while Block 3, the largest being 4,126.51
sq. km in size, received a bid only from Niko.
None of these blocks received any bid from
China. The Sri Lankan Government announced
on June 6, 2008, that after evaluation it
has decided to accept the bid of Cairn
India for block No. 1 and invited it to send
its representatives to Colombo for
negotiations. Fresh bids are to be invited
for the other two blocks. The rules
stipulate that for each block there should
be a minimum of three bids before
evaluation.
18. In response to an
invitation issued by President Rajapaksa
during his visit to Teheran in November,
2007. President Mahmud Ahmadinejad of Iran
paid a two-day official visit to Sri Lanka
on April 28 and 29, 2008.Since last year,
Sri Lanka has been facing economic
difficulties due to the drying-up of
economic assistance from countries of the
European Union (EU) such as Germany because
of what they perceive as the indifferent
attitude of the Rajapaksa Government to
complaints regarding the violation of the
human rights of the Tamils and its refusal
to seek a political solution to the
problem. Instead of succumbing to the EU
pressure on the subject, the Rajapaksa
Government turned for increased assistance
to other countries such as China and Iran,
which did not raise human rights issues as a
condition for such assistance. Assistance
from Iran was of crucial importance to Sri
Lanka because of the Government's inability
to pay for its increasingly costly oil
imports. The Government of Ahmadinejad
readily agreed to provide oil at
concessional rates to Sri Lanka and to train
a small team of officers of the Sri Lankan
Army and intelligence in Iran. It also
agreed to provide a low-interest loan to Sri
Lanka to enable it to purchase defence-related
equipment from China and Pakistan. In
addition, it agreed to invest US $ 1.5
billion in energy-related projects in Sri
Lanka. One of these projects is for the
production of hydel power and the other to
double the capacity of an existing oil
refinery in Sri Lanka. Work on the
construction of the hydel project started
during Mr. Ahmadinejad's visit. Iranian
engineers have already been preparing the
project report for doubling the capacity of
the refinery and for modifying it to enable
it to refine in future Iranian crude to be
supplied at concessional rates. The existing
capacity is 50,000 barrels a day.
19. Mr. Abdul Hameed
Mohamed Fowzie, Sri Lanka's Minister
for Petroleum and Petroleum Resources
Development, visited Riyadh in Saudi Arabia
towards the end of March,2008. He announced
at Riyadh on March 23, 2008, that Saudi
Arabia had agreed to train Sri Lankans in
the field of exploration and refining of oil
in the island. He told the media at Riyadh:
“We had fruitful discussions with my
counterpart here and we are happy that the
Kingdom has agreed to cooperate with Sri
Lanka in areas of mutual interests in the
field of oil supply, exploration and
investments. We have plans to improve our
refining capacity from 50,000 to 100,000
barrels a day and getting Saudi expertise
for the proposed expansion will facilitate
the successful implementation of the
project. Sri Lanka needs a cracker to
convert crude into diesel and petrol which
would cost the government some $400 million.
I have requested my counterpart to recommend
that the OPEC Fund assist us in the purchase
of this plant."
20. Sri Lanka
presently gets 70 per cent of its oil from
Iran, 10 per cent from Saudi Arabia and 20
per cent from Malaysia and other countries.
(The writer is
Additional Secretary (retired), Cabinet
Secretariat, Govt. of India, New Delhi, and,
presently, Director, Institute For Topical
Studies, Chennai. He is also associated with
the Chennai Centre For China
Studies. E-mail:
seventyone2@gmail.com)