Sri Lanka envoy ‘confident’ that China will agree to aid requests ‘at some point’
Army and police officers stand guard as protesters leave Ranil Wickremesinghe’s office building in Colombo, Sri Lanka, on Thursday. They had stormed the office hours after he was named acting president. Photo: AP
Sri Lanka is continuing negotiations with China for as much as US$4 billion in aid and is confident Beijing will agree “at some point”, according to a top envoy.
Colombo is asking China for a loan of US$1 billion to repay an equivalent amount of Chinese debt coming due this year, Palitha Kohona, Sri Lanka’s ambassador to China, said in an interview with Bloomberg Television on Friday. It is also seeking a US$1.5 billion credit line to pay for Chinese imports and activation of a US$1.5 billion swap, he added.
“We are confident that at some point the Chinese system will agree to our requests because these are not unreasonable requests,” Kohona said. “We have made similar requests to other creditors. Sri Lanka needs the funding to bring stability to our financial system and we are confident that the Chinese will come to the party sooner than later.”
The bankrupt South Asian country has received about US$3.8 billion in aid from neighbour India, and is negotiating for more. The cash is needed to pay for food and fuel purchases, with severe shortages seen stoking inflation to 70 per cent, triggering violent public protests and forcing President Gotabaya Rajapaksa to flee the nation and resign.
Sri Lanka’s federal government has about US$12.6 billion in outstanding bonds owed to global funds; all repayments are frozen and defaults have been recorded. It owes roughly an equivalent amount to bilateral creditors and multilateral lenders.
Some 10 per cent of Sri Lanka’s external debt is owed to China, Kohona said. Acting President Ranil Wickremesinghe had told Bloomberg News earlier that Japan is owed roughly an equal share but the interest rates on Chinese loans are higher. Wickremesinghe is seeking a bailout from the International Monetary Fund.
India has urged the IMF to treat all of Sri Lanka’s creditors on par. China is concerned about potential delays in repayments if the agreed US$1.5 billion swap is included in IMF talks, Sri Lankan authorities have said. Kohona declined to say if China will permit Sri Lanka to tap the swap but said this line would not be included in IMF talks.
Kohona on Friday said Sri Lanka’s relationship with “close, vital neighbour” India is not dependent on the island’s “warm, proximate” relationship with China. He added that China-Sri Lanka relations will survive the departure of Rajapaksa, who was seen as close to Beijing.
“The president has gone, but in coming weeks we will decide on a successor,” Kohona said. “What we went through was a popular uprising, a popular expression of disenchantment. The people have expressed themselves.”