Sri Lanka launches new port built with Chinese loan

HAMBANTOTA, Sri Lanka, (Reu-ters) – Sri Lanka flooded  a new port yesterday, built with Chinese assistance as part of  a $6 billion drive to rebuild the island nation’s  infrastructure after a quarter century of war.  

The Hambantota port, built at an estimated cost of $1.5  billion on the southern coast, will begin handling ships from  November, officials said. 

“This is part of making this country an emerging wonder of  Asia,” President Mahinda Rajapaksa said after launching the  port. 
 
Hambantota is one of four ports being built or upgraded  under Rajapaksa’s plan to renew the country’s $42 billion  economy by returning it to its old and lucrative role as a  trading hub.  

Built to handle 2,500 ships annually in the first stage,  the new port is located along the East-West shipping lane and  is ultimately meant to challenge Singa-pore’s status as a  regional shipping hub.  

Sri Lanka now handles around 6,000 ships annually in its  only port in Colombo on the western coast, which requires ships  plying the East-West shipping lane to divert course. 
 
Rajapaksa vowed to transform the island’s economy with a  series of infrastructure projects, soon after crushing a  25-year insurgency by the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam last  year.  

“It is not sea water that will fill this port but the  future prosperity of our nation. From this port will emerge our  true economic independence, “ he said in a speech.  

China’s involvement in the building of the port had raised  concerns in India, but analysts said Rajapaksa had successfully  handled Indian pressure. Security analysts in India worry that  the port was part of Beijing’s String of Pearls strategy to  build a network of ports across the Indian Ocean.