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Chinese FM flags railway project with Myanmar, but oppn remains strong
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SME Times News Bureau | 15 Jan, 2021
Chinese Foreign Minister Wang Yi has begun a four-nation trip to
Myanmar, Indonesia, Brunei and the Philippines in a bid to strengthen
relations with Southeast Asian nations. The visit is to not just
rekindle waning interest among nations for the Belt and Road Initiative
(BRI) projects but also improve regional relations before the new
American government comes to power.
The visit assumes importance
because Myanmar occupies a strategic geopolitical location, straddling
South Asia and Southeast Asia. It is therefore a country of enormous
interest to India, Japan and China's long-term rival, the US.
For
Wang, the paramount concern was to push the China Myanmar Economic
Corridor projects, to ensure Myanmar's structural reliance on Beijing.
Deeper connectivity and economic bonds can then be leveraged to expand
China's strategic influence in Myanmar.
To add a "feel good"
factor to the visit, Wang launched his four-nation tour from Myanmar by
promising three lakh coronavirus vaccines and other pharmaceutical
products to support the country in its fight against the pandemic. Wang
met Myanmar President U Win Myint and State Counsellor Aung San Suu Kyi
in capital Naypyitaw.
But the core driver of the visit was to
draw structural connectivity linkages between the strategic deep-water
port of Kyakhphyu and the Chinese mainland. Unsurprisingly, China
revisited its pet aspirational project extending a railway from the port
to its Yunnan province during Wang's visit.
Ahead of the trip,
China and Myanmar agreed to conduct a feasibility study on the
Mandalay-Kyaukphyu Railway project, an important segment of the China
Myanmar railway plan under the CMEC. The ambitious $20 billion rail
project is to connect China's Yunnan province to the Myanmarese
Kyaukphyu port in the Bay of Bengal, allowing China access to the Indian
Ocean region bypassing the Malacca strait that links the South China
Sea to the Andaman Sea. The railway will run parallel to an oil and gas
pipeline that has been already commissioned that will flow energy
consignments off-loaded at Kyaukphyu to Yunnan.
The Irrawaddy
reports that this infrastructure project has been delayed for nearly a
decade due to local objections. Though China projects the CMEC as a
development project which will bring riches to its southern neighbour,
Myanmarese remain apprehensive. Many feel that this Chinese project
could push Myanmar in a debt-trap and even exacerbate conflict in
regions where the project passes through.
Wang's visit is also
important as Myanmar has been inching closer to its western neighbour
India. Last year, Indian Army chief Gen. Manoj Naravane and Foreign
Secretary Harsh Vardhan Shringla had visited Myanmar to bolster border
and military cooperation. In December 2020, Myanmar began operating an
Indian submarine Sindhugosh, refurbished by India.
The two
countries are also flushing out, in joint operations, militants of the
Arakan Army on their nearly 1,600 km long border, besides developing the
mega Kaladan Multimodal Transit Transport (KMTT) project which connects
the Kolkata port to the Myanmarese port of Sittwe.
Wang and Suu
Kyi also discussed peace and stability on the border, regional
cooperation and China's role in the repatriation of the Rohingya
refugees by mediating between Bangladesh and Myanmar. The two nations
also signed agreements for economic and technical cooperation as well as
five-year development programme for Myanmar.
Wang's visit took
place at a time when China-Myanmar relations were going south. The China
proposed, and environmentally unsound Myitsone dam has stirred public
outrage in Myanmar. Wang's trip to Myanmar is significant also because
of the steadily creeping tension between the two neighbours over issues
like Chinese support to Myanmarese rebels, the unilateral construction
of a high-tech border fence as well as pushing for progress in the CMEC.
Myanmar
has reduced Chinese role in the CMEC by either stalling projects or
reducing Chinese monopoly by opening up the projects to other
countries.mega-dam project has stirred public sentiment against China.
Besides, the Myanmarese military has confronted China for supporting the
Arakan Army, an insurgent group against the government. So far,
Naypyitaw has been reluctant to go ahead with giant China funded
projects, to prevent the country from falling in a debt-trap, the
hallmark of projects falling under Beijing's BRI.
With Wang's
visit, China has embarked on a course correction exercise, with the
revival of the railway project as the spearhead. But one visit will not
be enough to erase the mistrust between the two countries, which has
historical roots, especially when key countries, especially India, the
US and Japan, part of the Indo-Pacific Quad, have launched their own
initiatives, which maybe more appealing to Naypyitaw.
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Customs Exchange Rates |
Currency |
Import |
Export |
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Euro
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Japanese
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