Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Chinese research ship seeks approval for port visit in Sri Lanka

Last year, India raised concerns over a Sri Lanka port call in Hambantota by Chinese research vessel Yuan Wang 5

Chinese research ship seeks approval for port visit in Sri Lanka

Colombo announced on Tuesday (22), that China has sought approval for a research ship to anchor in Sri Lanka. This request comes after the visit of a spacecraft-tracking vessel last year, which had raised security apprehensions from India.

Sri Lankan foreign ministry spokeswoman Priyanga Wickramasinghe said Beijing had sought permission for the Shi Yan 6 to dock, but that no date had been set and the request was being processed.


Chinese state broadcaster CGTN calls the Shi Yan 6 a "scientific research vessel" crewed by 60 that carries out oceanography, marine geology and marine ecology tests.

Last year, India raised concerns over a Sri Lanka port call in Hambantota by Chinese research vessel Yuan Wang 5, which specialises in spacecraft tracking and which New Delhi described as a spy ship.

India is suspicious of China's increasing presence in the Indian Ocean and its influence in Sri Lanka, seeing both as firmly within its sphere of influence.

Sri Lanka is strategically placed halfway along key east-west international shipping routes.

Last year, Colombo attempted to address New Delhi's concerns by asking China not to engage in any research activities while in Sri Lankan waters.

The Hambantota port has been run by the Chinese since 2017, when they took on a 99-year lease for $1.12 billion, less than the $1.4 billion Sri Lanka paid a Chinese firm to build it.

China last year said it was "completely unjustified for certain countries" to cite "security concerns" to pressure Sri Lanka.

China owns 52 per cent of cash-strapped Sri Lanka's bilateral debt, and Beijing's support is crucial for Colombo's efforts to restructure its foreign loans.

Colombo defaulted on its $46 billion external debt in April 2022, and must restructure its finances as part of an International Monetary Fund bailout.

(AFP)

More For You

Illegal migration fuelling racism in Britain, warns Shabana Mahmood

Shabana Mahmood arrives for a weekly cabinet meeting at Downing Street on November 18, 2025 in London, England. (Photo by Leon Neal/Getty Images)

Illegal migration fuelling racism in Britain, warns Shabana Mahmood

BRITAIN is becoming a more racist country as race relations worsen because politicians on the far left, including within the governing Labour party, are in denial about the scale of public concern over illegal migration, home secretary Shabana Mahmood has said.

In an interview with the Times on Saturday (22), the country's first female Muslim Cabinet member to hold the post repeated her statement from the House of Commons earlier in the week. She said she and her family members had been targeted with racist and anti-Muslim abuse regularly.

Keep ReadingShow less