Asian ports: Pitfalls of China’s One Belt, One Road Initiative
Source: Daily Mail
By James M. Dorsey
Troubled ports in Pakistan and Sri Lanka, envisioned as part
of China’s string of pearls linking the Eurasian heartland to the Middle
Kingdom, exemplify political pitfalls that threaten Beijing’s ambitious One
Belt, One Road project.
Political violence over the past decade has stopped
Pakistan’s Gwadar port from emerging as a major trans-shipment hub in Chinese
trade and energy supplies while turmoil in Sri Lanka threatens to dissuade
Chinese investors from sinking billions into the country’s struggling
Hambantota port and planned economic hub.
The problems of the two ports serve as pointers to simmering
discontent and potential resistance to China’s ploy for dominance through
cross-continental infrastructure linkage across a swath of land that is restive
and ripe for political change.
Chinese,
Pakistani and Russian officials warned in December that militant groups in
Afghanistan, including the Islamic State (IS) had stepped up operations in
Afghanistan. IS in cooperation with the Pakistani Taliban launched two months
later a
wave of attacks that has targeted government, law enforcement, the military
and minorities and has killed hundreds of people.
China is investing $51 billion in Pakistan infrastructure
and energy, including Gwadar port in the troubled province of Balochistan that
is struggling to attract business nine years after it was initially inaugurated.
The government announced this week that it had deployed 15,000 troops to protect China’s
investment in Pakistan, a massive project dubbed the China-Pakistan Economic
Corridor (CPEC).
For Gwadar to become truly viable, Pakistan will have to not
only address Baluch grievances that have prompted militancy and calls for
greater self-rule, if not independence, but also ensure that Baluchistan does
not become a playground in the bitter struggle for regional hegemony between
Saudi Arabia and Iran.
To do so, Pakistan will have to either crackdown on militant
Afghan groups with the Taliban in the lead who operate with official acquiescence
out of the Baluch capital of Quetta or successfully facilitate an end to
conflict in Afghanistan itself.
That is a tall order which in effect would require changes in
longstanding Pakistani policies. Gwadar’s record so far bears this out. Phase
II of Gwadar was completed in 2008, yet few ships anchor there and little
freight is handled.
Success would also require a break with long-standing Chinese
foreign and defence policy that propagates non-interference in the domestic
affairs of other countries. China has pledged $70 million in military aid to
Afghanistan, is training its police force, and has proposed
a four-nation security bloc that would include Pakistan, Afghanistan and
Tajikistan.
A mere 70 kilometres further west of Gwadar lies Iran’s
southernmost port city of Chabahar that has become the focal point of Indian
efforts to circumvent Pakistan in its access to energy-rich Central Asia and
serve as India’s Eurasian hub by linking it to a north-south corridor that
would connect Iran and Russia. Investment in Chabahar is turning it into Iran’s
major deep water port outside the Strait of Hormuz that is populated by Gulf
states hostile to the Islamic republic. Chabahar would also allow Afghanistan
to break Pakistan’s regional maritime monopoly.
Former Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa warned
Chinese officials in December that public protests would erupt if plans proceeded
to build in Hambantota a 6,000-hectare economic zone that would buffet a $1.5
billion-deep sea port, a $209-million international airport, a world-class
cricket stadium, a convention centre, and new roads. Protests
a month later against the zone turned violent. Similar protests against Chinese
investment have also erupted in recent years in Kyrgyzstan, Kazakhstan and
Tajikistan.
In Sri Lanka, the government has delayed the signing of agreements
with China on the port and the economic zone after the protests catapulted the
controversy onto the national agenda with opposition politicians and trade
unions railing against them. A Sri Lankan opposition member of parliament
moreover initiated legal proceedings to stop a debt-for-equity deal with China.
China’s Ambassador to Sri Lanka, Yi Xianliang warned that the
protests and opposition could persuade Chinese companies to walk away from
the $5 billion project. “We either go ahead or we stop here,” Yi said.
“The Hambantota fiasco is sending a clear message to
Beijing: showing up with bags of money alone is not enough to win a new Silk
Road,” commented Wade
Shepard, author of a forthcoming book on China’s One Belt, One Road
initiative.
Adding to China’s problems is its apparent willingness to at
times persuade its partners to circumvent or flout international standards of
doing business. A European
Union investigation into a Chinese-funded $2.9 billion rail link between
the Hungarian capital of Budapest and Belgrade, the capital of Serbia, could
punch a hole into Chinese plans to extend its planned Asian transportation
network into Europe. The investigation is looking at whether the deal seemingly
granted to Chinese companies violated EU laws stipulating that contracts for
large transportation projects must be awarded through public tenders.
The sum total of problems China is encountering across Eurasia
highlight a disconnect between grandiose promises of development and improved
standards of living and the core of Chinese policy: an insistence that
economics offer solutions to deep-seated conflicts, local aspirations, and a narrowing
of the gap between often mutually exclusive worldviews. It also suggests that
China believes that it can bend, if not rewrite rules, when it serves its
purpose.
To be sure, protests in Sri Lanka and Central Asia are as
much about China as they are expressions of domestic political rivalries that
at times are fought at China’s expense. Even so, they suggest that for China to
succeed, it will not only have to engage with local populations, but also
become a player rather than position itself as an economic sugar daddy that
hides behind the principle of non-interference and a flawed economic win-win
proposition.
Dr. James M. Dorsey is a senior fellow at the S.
Rajaratnam School of International Studies, co-director of the University of
Würzburg’s Institute for Fan Culture, and the author of The Turbulent World
of Middle East Soccer blog, a book with
the same title, Comparative Political Transitions
between Southeast Asia and the Middle East and North Africa, co-authored with Dr.
Teresita Cruz-Del Rosario and a forthcoming book, Shifting
Sands, Essays on Sports and Politics in the Middle East and North Africa
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