The Korea Herald

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Xi touts modern-day ‘maritime silk road’

Chinese leader begins crucial tour in Maldives

By Korea Herald

Published : Sept. 15, 2014 - 20:55

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MALE (AFP) ― China’s President Xi Jinping enlisted the Maldives’ backing for a “21st century maritime silk road” on Monday as he began a tour of South Asia in the strategically located Indian Ocean island chain.

The Maldives is best known for its tourist industry but also straddles major international shipping lanes, and Chinese investment there has grown significantly as Beijing seeks to secure vital trade routes.

“(The) Maldives was an important stop of the ancient maritime silk road,” Xi wrote in an article published on the local Sun Online news portal late Sunday.

“China welcomes (the) Maldives to get actively involved in building the 21st century maritime silk road by leveraging its own strength.”

Xi is in the Maldives at the start of a tour set to focus on China’s growing economic influence in South Asia, which has raised alarm bells in regional power India.

From the Maldives he will travel to Sri Lanka where China has invested heavily, building a deep-sea harbour and an international airport in an area that straddles the east-west shipping lane, the world‘s busiest trade route.
Chinese President Xi Jinping (right) walks with Maldives President Abdulla Yameen upon his arrival at the airport in Hulhule Island, Maldives, Sunday. (AP-Yonhap) Chinese President Xi Jinping (right) walks with Maldives President Abdulla Yameen upon his arrival at the airport in Hulhule Island, Maldives, Sunday. (AP-Yonhap)

The “maritime silk road” ― touted by Xi during a visit to Indonesia last year ― is intended to revive a trade route running from China through Southeast Asia and the Indian Ocean to Europe.

Chinese state news agency Xinhua said the Maldives’ President Abdulla Yameen “expressed total agreement” with Xi’s proposal, without giving further details.

The two leaders held talks in the capital Male focused on trade and aid after a formal welcome including a 21-gun salute.

Yameen’s office said he had reached nine agreements with China, including one on a project to build a bridge connecting the capital with the airport island of Hulule, a distance of about 1 kilometer.

It is the first visit by a leader from Beijing since the former British protectorate gained independence in 1965, but will be the second meeting between the two leaders in a matter of weeks, following their talks last month in the Chinese city of Nanjing.

A source close to Yameen’s government told AFP ahead of the talks they would steer clear of sensitive security issues as New Delhi considers the islands to be within its sphere of influence.

India has regarded China’s growing influence among its neighbors with concern, leading new Prime Minister Narendra Modi to prioritise regional relationships that critics say the previous government neglected.