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Showing posts with label Diplomacy. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Diplomacy. Show all posts

Sunday, June 7, 2026

BEING NEUTRAL IN A WAR-TORN WORLD: Exploring Swiss Foreign Policy of Neutrality

By Sachinthani Ketakumbura

In an increasingly war-driven world, for a state to be neutral or to ‘not pick a side’ is viewed in different ways. Some might call it wisdom, some cowardice, and some might even say neutrality itself is choosing a side. Awarelogue Asian Institute had the pleasure of engaging in a fruitful conversation with the Ambassador of Switzerland to Sri Lanka and the Maldives, Her Excellency Dr. Siri Walt, on her thoughts on the foreign policy of Switzerland and much more, at her official residence on 12th May 2026.

Understanding Neutrality

Neutrality, by definition, refers to a stance adopted by a nation or state to not ally with any parties involved in a conflict. It simply means refraining from actively engaging in war, avoiding joining alliances, and treating all parties equally. It also means not supplying any mercenary troops and not allowing other states to use its territory (Neutrality (Political Relations) | Diplomacy and International Relations | Research Starters | EBSCO Research, n.d.). While understanding neutrality, it is also important to know the distinction between neutrality and non-alignment, since they are not the same. Neutrality, by definition, is when a state decides not to pick a side, whereas non-alignment falls under the same broad category but is also motivated by promoting friendly relations and peace while standing together for a common cause.

Switzerland's Neutrality: A Philosophy that Dates Back 500 Years

Switzerland’s stance on neutrality existed long before the World Wars or the Cold War. Neutrality is a philosophy that has shaped Swiss foreign policy for over 500 years. As Switzerland’s patron saint Nicholas of Flüe (also known as Brother Klaus) has said, “Do not mix in the affairs of others or ally yourself with a powerful stranger. Protect your country and do not hold yourself distant from it…” (Why Is Switzerland a Neutral Country? | Expatica, 2025).

Swiss neutrality as a foreign policy measure dates back to 1515, when the Confederates were defeated at the Battle of Marignano, and the Treaty of Westphalia (1648), during the Thirty Years’ War. However, it was at the Congress of Vienna in 1815 that this was formally recognised by the international community, and Switzerland formalized this position in 1907 by signing the Hague Convention governing the rights and obligations of neutral states in the event of war (Neutrality, n.d.).

Swiss Neutrality in Modern Times

Despite taking a stance as a neutral state, Switzerland has had to redefine its version of neutrality due to certain global conflicts. Switzerland took part in economic sanctions against Iraq during the first Gulf War in 1991, and it joined NATO's Partnership for Peace Programme in 1996, stressing the need to promote peace and security while keeping its right to withdraw when needed. In 1999, Switzerland also sent unarmed volunteers to support peacekeeping efforts in Kosovo (Neutrality, n.d.).

Looking at the proximity of the Russia-Ukraine war, the worldly implications of the Israel-Palestine conflict, and the volatile situation surrounding Iran and its West Asian neighbours, one cannot help but question the purpose of Swiss neutrality. When international law is being violated, when civilians are being killed, and when human rights are being stripped away in plain sight, does staying silent not make you complicit? While Switzerland may be perceived this way, the reality happens to be much more complex. Swiss neutrality is more of a strategy than silence. By refusing to align itself with any side, Switzerland positions itself as a state that all parties can trust, making it one of the few countries in the world capable of mediating between conflicting powers and hosting the kind of negotiations that can actually move toward peace. A country that has picked a side cannot play that role.

Most importantly, while the Swiss follow neutrality as their foreign policy, they have also been consistent and outspoken in issuing statements condemning violations of human rights across these conflicts, making clear that neutrality does not mean the absence of values or being morally indifferent, but rather the careful exercise of them.

Switzerland as a Mediator

Switzerland has played a major role as a successful mediator in global conflicts. The Swiss facilitated secret communications and hosted negotiations that led to the Evian Accords and a ceasefire agreement in the Algerian War (1961–1962). During the Cold War era, Switzerland hosted high-profile meetings, especially the 1985 Geneva Summit between Ronald Reagan and Mikhail Gorbachev, which signaled a thaw in the Cold War (Tognina, 2024).

At present, Switzerland acts more as a messenger or go-between for countries with severed or strained diplomatic relations. Switzerland has agreed to represent the interests of the USA in the cases of Venezuela and Iran. In the Russia-Ukraine conflict, the Swiss government also offered to represent Ukraine's interests in Russia, a proposal reiterated by the Swiss President to the Russian Foreign Minister in 2022 (Tognina, 2024).

This shift from the role of mediator to messenger is a result of the fact that international bodies like the United Nations are now the primary drivers of conflict resolution, even if the UN’s efficiency in mitigating certain conflicts is being questioned at present. Swiss foreign policy focuses on maintaining basic diplomatic channels, which is part of Switzerland’s ‘good offices’ tradition, and is often driven by a combination of humanitarian values and national self-interest (Tognina, 2024).

The Paradox of Having an Army: Armed Neutrality

Switzerland’s decision to have an active army is another interesting debate. Despite having a neutral foreign policy, what does it really mean to have an army if you are not going to war? Switzerland practises the policy of ‘armed neutrality’ by maintaining an active military. Neutrality alone is not a guarantee of peace. Thus, armed neutrality is a way of deterring potential attackers while maintaining neutral status. Having an active army also allows the Swiss military to actively contribute to global peace under the Swiss Constitution. In a 2001 referendum, the Swiss electorate narrowly voted in favour of arming Swiss military personnel deployed in peacebuilding missions (Neutrality, n.d.).

Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, considering its geographical proximity, makes the threat of invasion or possible attacks from outside a very real concern. It is therefore inevitable that the Swiss government take steps to protect its territory and citizens should it ever come to that. This reality has led to a renewed focus on military readiness and an increase in the defence budget to address gaps in equipment and infrastructure that resulted from decades of peace (Admin Hit, 2025).

Neutrality, as Switzerland has demonstrated for over 500 years, is neither simple nor passive. It is a deliberate choice by a nation to position itself as a space for mediation and negotiation in a time of global conflict. With Geneva serving as the headquarters for some of the world’s most important human rights institutions, Switzerland, both by action and by symbol, does not look away from violations of human rights. It condemns what is happening in this complex global order. Swiss neutrality is about being a state that keeps the door open for everyone, for the sake of peace in the long run.

References

Admin_Hit. (2025, October 28). The Swiss military: How a neutral country prepares for war. -. https://howitticks.ch/podcast/mathias-muller-swiss-military/

Neutrality. (n.d.). https://www.aboutswitzerland.eda.admin.ch/en/neutrality

Neutrality (political relations) | Diplomacy and International Relations | Research Starters | EBSCO Research. (n.d.). EBSCO. https://www.ebsco.com/research-starters/diplomacy-and-international-relations/neutrality-political-relations

Tognina, A. (2024, January 28). Switzerland as a mediator – the successes and failures. SWI swissinfo.ch. https://www.swissinfo.ch/eng/politics/switzerland-as-a-mediator-the-successes-and-failures/48073942

Why is Switzerland a neutral country? | Expatica. (2025, April 23). Expatica Switzerland. https://www.expatica.com/ch/moving/society-history/neutral-switzerland-107842/

Thursday, June 4, 2026

CLOSING DOORS: AUSTRALIA’S HOUSING CRISIS AND ITS CONSEQUENCES FOR ASIA

How Australia’s Housing Crisis is reshaping its politics, closing its doors, and reordering its place in Asia

By Sisaru Diyunuge

Imagine paying over half of your take home pay simply to keep a roof over your head.

Imagine being a nurse, a teacher, or a tradesman or woman – the very people any society depends on to function and still being unable to afford to live within an hour’s commute of where you work. This is daily life for hundreds of thousands of Australians today. Australia, long celebrated as one of the worlds’ most livable nations, is navigating a housing crisis so significant that it had begun to strain the social contract, reshape its politics, and in ways that matter directly on how Australia engages with all of Asia.

The story of how the ‘lucky country’ - what Australia is commonly referred to as; how a wealthy western-democracy arrived at this juncture is complex. It involves decades of political miscalculation, an addiction to property as the primary vehicle of national wealth, the economic arithmetic of post-COVID migration, and a construction industry that has consistently failed to build enough homes. Yet in the overheated language of electoral politics, this complex story has been distilled to a single, incendiary word: immigration.

The consequences of that distillation reach beyond Australia’s shores. For the approximately 200,000 plus Sri Lankans who call Australia home and the 1,000,000 plus Australian-Sri Lankans – the political weather is shifting in ways that are already tangible and may grow significantly more so. For Sri Lanka and Asia at large, Australia as a partner in trade, education, and diaspora remittances would demand careful attention moving forward.

The Making of a Crisis

Australia’s housing crisis was not a result of an overnight change in policy. Policies which favoured the interests of existing property owners over those who had yet to enter the market were introduced at least three decades ago.

The fundamentals are straightforward: the pace at which homes were built was not commensurate with the increase in population. The reasons are multi-faceted and intertwined: restrictive zoning rules that prevent higher-density housing in desirable urban areas, as slow and fragmented planning approval systems spread across hundreds of municipal councils, a building sector plagued with labour shortages and rising material costs, and a tax system that, through policies such as negative gearing and the capital gains tax discount, has consistently incentivized the purchase of investment properties over the construction of new ones.

The tax incentives deserve particular scrutiny. Negative gearing is the ability to offset losses on an investment property against other income. And the halving of capital gains tax (a levy on the profit made from selling an asset) on assets held for more than a year have effectively made the Australian property market a subsidized investment vehicle. This has driven prices higher, enriched those already on the property ladder, and made entry progressively more difficult for those who are not.

The COVID-19 pandemic added its own disorienting chapter. When Australia closed its borders in 2020, international students and temporary migrants departed en masse. Population growth slowed dramatically. One might have expected house prices to fall. They did not. Instead, prices surged by roughly 25 per cent in little over a year – a period of historically low immigration. This inconvenient fact is rarely mentioned in political discourse, yet it demolishes the simplest version of the argument that immigration is the primary driver of unaffordability.

The Political Explosion

Into this volatile environment has stepped Pauline Hanson and her One Nation party, offering an explanation that is simple, emotionally resonant, and arguably misleading. The argument is essentially this: too many migrants are competing for too few homes, and the solution is to drastically reduce immigration.

One Nation is not a novel phenomenon. Ms Hanson first came onto the Australian political scene in 1996 after winning a lower house legislative assembly seat for a rural electorate in the state of Queensland. Immediately thereafter, her rhetoric of anti-immigration and anti-Aboriginal platform was made clear. She was eventually sidelined by the Liberal party which represents the traditional center-right, only to return in 2016 to the upper house of the Australian federal Parliament as a senator with renewed relevance. But what is happening in 2026 represents something qualitatively different: a potential structural realignment of Australian politics rather than a cyclical protest vote. In the 2025 federal election, One Nation received roughly 6 per cent of the primary vote, a modest result. But the tremors began almost immediately after Australian Labour’s landslide victory after the popularity of the traditional center-right Liberal party started to slip amongst rural and outer-suburban conservative voters to One Nation and as well as more affluent, university-educated and/or white-collar urban voters who now moved to an alternative political force to One Nation and the Liberal Party commonly referred to as the “Teal Independents” with a more centrist, pro-market attitude.

Post-election surveys conducted by researchers at Macquarie University and the Australian National University found that 60 per cent of respondents believed immigration had gone too far or much too far. Among One Nation voters and supporters of the small far-right Trumpet of Patriots part, that figure approached 90 per cent. Significantly, anti-immigration sentiment is not confined to the elderly or the economically marginalized. Among Australians aged 18 to 34, a demographic that has borne the sharpest pain of housing unaffordability, 32 per cent identified immigration as a leading cause of their predicament.

What makes the numbers particularly striking in a global context is that Australia has compulsory voting. Every eligible citizen must cast a ballot. This is not a case of a motivated extremist minority turning out while the moderate majority stays at home, as has happened in some European and American political upheavals. When one in four Australians indicate they would currently vote for One Nation, including people who might not advertise that preference to neighbours or colleagues, but who mark it nonetheless in the privacy of the ballot box.

The sociological profile of One Nation voters has also evolved. While the party’s base has historically been male, mostly rural, and blue-collar, economically insecure workers who on most measures of class interest are indistinguishable from Labour voters – the housing crisis has extended its appear into the outer-suburbs and among song younger renters who feel permanently locked out of the dream their parents took for granted.

Analysts note that since 1993, the combined vote for candidates outside the two major parties has risen from under 11 per cent to nearly 34 per cent in 2025. For the first time in polling history, a member of the traditional two-party duopoly – the Liberal Party – recorded a lower primary vote than a minor party. The era of rusted voters reliably supporting Labor, or the Liberal Party and their rural coalition partner the Nationals Party appears to be ending, and One Nation is the primary beneficiary on the right.

The Gas and the Kitchen Table

To understand why Australia’s housing crisis extends so far beyond its borders, one must understand the peculiar economics of Australian prosperity- and the tensions those economics are now generating.

Australia is, in one sense, extraordinarily wealthy. It sits atop some of the world’s largest deposits of iron ore, coal, and natural gas. These resources have been the engine of economic growth for decades, and their primary customers are in Asia: China, Japan, South Korea, India and Taiwan. More than 80 per cent of Australia’s coal exports flow to these markets. Iron ore, the steel-making raw material extracted primarily from Western Australia, goes overwhelmingly to China – in 2023, China purchased 84 per cent of Australia’s iron ore exports, which in turn accounted for nearly a quarter of all Australian export revenue. In short, the Chinese construction and manufacturing boom built much of the financial comfort that Australians have enjoyed, and that comfort is now threatened by its own internal contradictions.

Liquified natural gas (LNG) paints a revealing story, and one that is generating significant and underappreciated domestic tension. Japan is Australia’s largest LNG customer, importing approximately $39 billion in 2024 alone. These are multi-decade contracts, negotiated over years, underpinned by massive Japanese investments in Australian export infrastructure. Japan’s Inpex Corporation operates Ichthys LNP project in Australia’s Northern Territory, which at the time of its approval represented the single largest overseas investment ever made by a Japanese company.

The problem is that ordinary Australians are paying sky-high energy prices while this gas flows offshore under long-term contracts. Critics argue that Australia exports gas at favourable rates to Japan and South Korea while domestic consumers and businesses faced among the highest energy costs in the developed world. A 2025 analysis found that Japanese companies resold between 10 and 13 million tons of Australian LNG in that year alone. In plain terms: Japanese intermediaries were on-selling Australian gas to third-party markets at a profit, while Australians struggle to heat their homes.

The relationship is further complicated by climate politics. Australia’s Labor government has pledged significant emissions reductions by 2035 yet continues to approve LNG expansion projects backed by Japanese investment. When the government applied the ‘Safeguard Mechanism’ — a policy requiring large industrial emitters to reduce or offset carbon emissions — Japan’s senior energy executives publicly warned that this threatened the reliability of supply. It was an extraordinary intervention by a foreign corporate interest in Australian domestic policy, and it did not go unnoticed by Australian voters already skeptical of globalization. Critics have accused the Australian government of prioritizing the interests of foreign energy corporations over those of its own citizens.

Queensland’s unilateral increase of coal royalties in 2022 similarly provoked the Japanese Ambassador to Australia to issue a public rebuke — a rare breach of diplomatic protocol that underscored how deeply Asian governments view Australian resource policy as a shared concern. These episodes have fed a narrative, particularly on the populist right, that Australian politicians have sold the country’s resources cheaply to foreign buyers while ordinary citizens are locked out of affordable housing and paying excessive energy bills.

China, Iron, and the Weight of Dependence

Further, the iron ore relationship with China is existential. No comparable economy in the modern world depends as heavily on a single export to a single customer as Australia depends on iron ore sales to China. When China in 2020 imposed sweeping trade restrictions on Australian goods such as barley, wine, coal, lobsters as retaliation for Australia’s call for an international inquiry into the origins of COVID-19, Australian agriculture suffered severely. Yet the broader economy held up, partly because iron ore was never restricted: Beijing needed it too much. The episode demonstrated both Australia’s vulnerability and its leverage. China purchased 69 per cent of global iron ore exports in 2023 — finding alternative buyers for Australian supply would be extraordinarily difficult. This mutual dependence has produced what analysts describe as a peculiar intimacy: two countries with deepening strategic differences and a profound economic codependency neither can easily escape.

The Albanese government, elected in 2022, successfully normalized relations with Beijing, and by late 2024 virtually all trade restrictions had been lifted. But the underlying structural anxieties remain. As China’s property sector slows — the construction boom that drove steel demand and therefore iron ore demand is cooling — Australia’s export revenue faces structural headwinds that no diplomatic normalisation can fully address. The mining wealth that has subsidised Australian living standards and insulated governments from making hard housing-policy choices may be entering a period of decline precisely as the domestic political pressures it has obscured become impossible to ignore.

What This Means for Sri Lankans in Australia

Against this backdrop, the situation of Sri Lankans in Australia — people spanning citizens, permanent residents, temporary workers, and students is increasingly precarious.

Sri Lankans have built a remarkable presence in Australian professional life. Between 2020 and 2024 alone, more than 15,000 Sri Lankans entered Australia through skilled migration programmes, making the community the sixth largest in the skilled employment visa category. In 2024, more than 32,000 Sri Lankan students held Australian student visas, making Sri Lanka the eleventh largest source of international students in the country. The city of Melbourne in the State of Victoria has become home to a dense Sri Lankan community. Professionals in medicine, engineering, finance, information technology, and education — fields where Australia faces genuine shortages — form the backbone of the Sri Lankan diaspora.

Yet the political climate is changing in ways that affect even those who are already there, and that are closing doors on those who wish to come. In February 2026, Australia’s Department of Home Affairs recorded a 38 per cent refusal rate for Sri Lankan higher education student visa applications — placing Sri Lanka among the five countries with the highest rejection rates globally, behind Nepal (65 per cent), Bangladesh (51 per cent), and India (40 per cent). As recently as late 2025, Sri Lanka had enjoyed ‘Evidence Level 1’ status under Australia’s Simplified Student Visa Framework, meaning streamlined processing and minimal documentation requirements. By January 2026, Sri Lanka had been downgraded to Level 2, ending the minimal-evidence era for most applicants.

The official reason given is integrity: concerns about fraudulent financial documentation and ‘search fund’ schemes in which funds are temporarily moved to pass verification checks. These concerns are real and not confined to Sri Lanka. But the broader context is unmistakable.

Australia has signaled that student visa programmes are no longer treated solely as educational pathways but also as ‘a key lever of migration control.’ International student numbers are being used as a tool to reduce net migration figures in response to domestic political pressure driven in no small part by housing unaffordability.

The practical consequences for Sri Lankan families are severe. Each rejected applicant loses a non-refundable visa application fee of approximately AUD 2,000 and must decide whether to reapply, pivot to Canada or the United Kingdom, or abandon overseas study entirely. Australian universities, meanwhile, risk missing enrolment targets in postgraduate programs that have historically relied heavily on South Asian students. The education consultancy sector in Colombo warns that repeated policy shifts and opaque assessment criteria are eroding trust in Australia as a destination, potentially causing long-term reputational damage that outlasts any political cycle.

For Sri Lankans already in Australia as temporary residents or on bridging visas, the uncertainty is of a different and rather sinister nature as they are in permanent limbo. Processing times for permanent residency applications have lengthened substantially. The political noise around immigration has translated into a bureaucratic culture of heightened scrutiny, where caseworkers apply discretion more conservatively than in previous years. Community organisations report growing anxiety among Sri Lankan families who have built lives in Australia over years or decades, but whose immigration status remains unresolved.

The rise of One Nation is not yet a governing proposition, but it shapes the political environment within which all parties operate. When 60 per cent of the electorate believes immigration has gone too far, mainstream parties — the governing Australian Labor party included — respond by tightening policies rather than defending the economic and social case for migration. The result is a ratchet: the political pressure moves in one direction only, and the Sri Lankan community, like other migrant communities, bears the costs of a debate it had no part in creating.

Will Australia Turn Transactional?

The question that should concern policymakers in Colombo — and in most Asian capitals — is whether the political forces now reshaping Australia will produce a country that is more transactional in its engagement with the region: willing to sell coal and LNG and iron ore, but increasingly reluctant to accept the people, students, and cultural exchange that give substance to genuine partnership.

There are reasons to worry about the One Nation worldview — and, to a lesser but still significant degree, the mainstream political response to its rise — tends to separate ‘good’ trade from ‘problematic’ immigration. Resources can be exported; gas can be contracted; iron ore can be shipped. These transactions create wealth, or at least the illusion of it, without asking Australians to share their neighborhood, school, or suburb. People are more complicated. They need housing. They change the character of communities. They are visible in ways that a cargo vessel departing from Port Hedland is not.

This division is, in important respects, a false one. Australia’s multicultural communities, including its large Indian, Chinese, Vietnamese, and Sri Lankan diasporas are precisely the soft-power infrastructure that gives Australian engagement with Asia its depth and credibility. The Australian Department of Foreign Affairs and Trade’s own 2025 strategic snapshot acknowledged that the country’s multicultural communities provide ‘insights, skills and perspectives’ that strengthen its engagement with the world. The $33 million ASEAN-Australia Centre, recently established to build business, educational, and cultural connections with Southeast Asia, exists because Australia’s policymakers understand that trade alone does not build durable partnerships.

But understanding and political practice are increasingly divergent. A government that responds to One Nation’s rise by cutting student visas and tightening migration is, whether it intends to or not, dismantling the human architecture of the very relationships it simultaneously claims to be investing in.

The LNG and gas contract controversy adds a further layer of irony. At precisely the moment when ordinary Australians are questioning whether the country’s resource export arrangements serve Australian interests, Australian governments are under intense pressure from Asian energy corporations to maintain and extend those same arrangements. The result is a political economy in which fossil fuel exports to Asia are protected — because the industry employs 215,000 Australians and generates enormous government revenue — while the human connections that give Australia’s Asian relationships their social and cultural dimension are quietly eroded.

What Sri Lanka Should Understand

For Sri Lankans reading this from Colombo or Kandy or Galle, the implications are practical as well as strategic. In the near term, students and families considering Australia as an education destination should approach the process with greater care and documentation than was previously required. The era of straightforward approvals is, for the time being, over. Financial evidence must be meticulous and verifiable. Academic progression plans must be credible and well-documented. Those who have family members already in Australia on temporary visas should seek legal advice about their pathways to permanency, as processing environments have grown less forgiving.

More broadly, Sri Lanka’s government should be actively calibrating its education and labour migration strategies to reflect a world in which Australia is one option among several rather than the default choice it was for a previous generation. Canada, Germany, and the United Kingdom are actively competing for the same skilled Sri Lankan professionals and students. Australia’s political turbulence creates market space that other countries are moving quickly to fill.

On the bilateral relationship more broadly, Colombo should resist the temptation to assume that the Australia it has known — an enthusiastic champion of regional integration, people-to-people exchange, and multicultural engagement — is necessarily the Australia of the next decade.

Diplomatic relationships with Australia must be sustained and deepened precisely because they are under pressure, not because they can be taken for granted. The Sri Lankan community in Australia, large and professionally accomplished, is itself a form of diplomatic resource — a bridge that should be cultivated by both governments, not left to navigate hostile political weather alone.

There is also a cautionary tale here for Sri Lanka’s own development. Australia’s housing crisis is in significant part the result of treating property as a primary investment vehicle, of failing to build social and affordable housing over decades, of allowing planning systems to prioritize the comfort of existing owners over the needs of future residents. These are not uniquely Australian temptations. Any rapidly urbanising economy that allows housing markets to serve investment rather than habitation risks arriving, eventually, at the same destination.

Conclusion: The Cost of Simplicity

Australia is a country trying to solve a complex, multi-generational problem with a simple, emotionally satisfying but empirically inadequate answer. Housing unaffordability is real and acute, and its effects on working Australians — particularly the young — are genuinely devastating. But its causes lie in decades of tax policy favoring investment over construction, planning systems that protect the interests of existing owners, a construction sector ill-equipped to scale, and a post-COVID rebound in migration occurring into an already depleted housing stock. Although, the 2026 federal budget brought in sweeping changes to the capital gains tax and negative gearing, making it more favorable for future generations to enter the housing market.

The political response to blame immigration, to channel that blame through parties like One Nation, and to respond with visa restrictions and migration caps is arguably the path of least resistance. It does not build a single additional house. It does not reform a single zoning regulation. It does not change the tax treatment of property investment. But it is visible; it is politically legible, and in a system of compulsory voting, it can command a majority.

The consequences of this path extend far beyond Australia. For Sri Lankans in Australia, it means greater uncertainty, more scrutiny, and harder pathways to permanency. For Sri Lankans hoping to study in Australia, it means higher rejection rates and more expensive, more bureaucratically demanding applications. For Sri Lanka as a country, it means a partner in the region that is gradually retreating from the human dimension of its Asian engagement, even as it insists on maintaining and expanding its resource export relationships.

Australia will remain an important country. Its resources, its institutions, and its geographic position in the Indo-Pacific ensure that. But the Australia that emerges from this political moment may be a smaller version of itself: more suspicious, less generous, more transactional, and ultimately less equipped for the kind of partnership that the Asia-Pacific’s uncertain future will require.

The house prices are real. Anger is real. What is being lost, quietly and without fanfare, is something harder to measure and far harder to rebuild.

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Sunday, March 15, 2026

STRENGTHENING SRI LANKA-ITALY RELATIONS THROUGH CULTURAL DIPLOMACY

By Arosh C. De Silva

Sri Lanka and the Italian Republic have maintained close diplomatic, economic, and cultural ties since the establishment of formal relations in the early 1950s. Sri Lanka’s global engagement with Italy has seen much potential as a key partner on the path towards strong cooperation on the world stage. Yet within the relations, cultural diplomatic cooperation is yet to be fully mobilised as a tool of diplomacy. This articles endeavours to highlight the opportunities that exist. It highlights the importance of cultural diplomacy solidarity in Italy-Sri Lanka relations and offers insights into how cultural diplomacy can be further strengthened in bilateral relations.

A need for cultural solidarity

Dating back several centuries, Italy and Sri Lanka have maintained close political and trade links and have long enjoyed good relations, which have been characterised by close economic, political, social and cultural ties. Italy’s expanding diplomatic, cultural, and economic engagement with Sri Lanka has been highlighted through diplomatic visits and the signing of agreements that point to a strategic deepening of ties.

Among the most recent, the governments of Sri Lanka and Italy formally renewed the Bilateral Agreement for the Mutual Recognition of Driving Licences, reaffirming cooperation between the two countries in December 2025. The Driving License Agreement further strengthens the bilateral relations and that facility has been highly welcomed by the large Sri Lankan diaspora living and working in Italy, as it has improved job prospects and future employment opportunities, allowing them to contribute more effectively as a productive expatriate community.

The visit of Italy’s Deputy Minister for Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation, Maria Tripodi, to Sri Lanka in September 2025, marked a significant strengthening in Sri Lanka’s evolving foreign relations with Italy. The visit included high-level discussions with Prime Minister Harini Amarasuriya and Foreign Minister Vijitha Herath, and was aimed at bilateral cooperation across cultural, education, and economic (Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Foreign Employment and Tourism, Sri Lanka). A key highlight of the visit was the signing of ‘Memorandum of Understanding on the Establishment of a Political Consultations Mechanism’, marking a step towards strengthening bilateral ties and diplomatic engagement, at the beginning of what officials describe as a ‘new institutional chapter’ in bilateral relations (Lanka News Web, 2025).

With this background of bilateral relations, which addressed more collaborative mechanisms, the calls for strengthening cultural diplomacy remains a potential avenue for a further deepening of the longstanding ties. In today’s interdependent world system, there has been a growing recognition of the potential of Soft Power. This concept of Soft Power which was introduced by Joseph Nye, to describe the ability of one country to shape the attitudes of another (Nye, 2004), is widely used by countries in their relationships with foreign nations. Herein cultural diplomacy is often viewed as a strategic instrument for projecting a nation's identity and values on the global stage, thereby influencing how other countries perceive its foreign policy objectives.

For Milton C. Cummings, cultural diplomacy, was “the exchange of ideas, information, art, and other aspects of culture among nations and their peoples in order to foster mutual understanding” (UNESCO, 2022). At its core, cultural diplomacy involves the exchange of ideas, art, language, music, cinema, fashion, architecture and other cultural aspects between nations to build bridges and enhance relationships and image abroad. It enables nations to influence global perceptions. In that context, how can Sri Lanka and Italy advance relations by using cultural diplomacy as an effective tool? To address this question, several ideas could be suggested to enhance bilateral relations.

Building bridges through language and education exchanges

For Italy, the cultural soft power promoted through cultural diplomacy has always been an important foreign policy instrument (Medici, 2019). Culture is an essential part of Italy’s identity, making its image abroad, as the Italian language represents a key principle of Italy’s foreign policy (Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation). Such an area can be collaboratively strengthened further with Sri Lanka, to establish more meaningful and deeper bilateral relations.

Sri Lanka, with its rich cultural heritage, beaches, wildlife and authentic experiences, was ranked among the top 10 destinations to travel to in 2025 by BBC Travel’s inaugural guide to the world’s top travel spots (Rizkiya, 2025). Sri Lanka has quietly captivated travellers for decades, and according to the Sri Lanka Tourism Development Authority, 43,948 tourists from Italy arrived in Sri Lanka up to November 2025, out of a total of 2,103,593 international tourists in 2025.

Italy is also home to a significant Sri Lankan expatriate community of which 102,906 Sri Lankans legally reside in Italy. They represent the 11th largest community of non-European citizenship (Report on the Sri Lankan Community in Italy, 2022). This highlights the need for strong partnership and collaboration in the spheres of linguistic and cultural exchange which have potential to deepen the dynamic and mutually rewarding relationship between two countries.

The ability to communicate in the Italian language is not only essential to the Sri Lankan diaspora in Italy, but it is important to communicate with Italians effectively, and to interact with Italians visiting Sri Lanka. Italy has the 8th largest economy in the world, and is ranked third among the European economic powers. For Sri Lanka, collaborating more with Italy is essential to achieve its tourism-oriented economy as well as for foreign revenue.

In the education sector, it is found that a significant number of migrants arrive in Italy with the purpose of higher studies. There are a number of scholarship programmes offered by the Italian government (Embassy of Italy in Colombo), and as a European Union member state, Italy funds the Erasmus scholarship programme, which underscores Italy’s cultural exchanges at the educational level. This strengthens a range of collaborations in intellectual exchange, in education. Such initiatives for the younger generation, while fostering international student exchanges at all levels between Italy and Sri Lanka, can be implemented as consistent long-term partnerships, sharing the two countries' deep understanding. The exchange of persons is an important basis for enhancing mutual understanding among different cultures and strengthening relationships with foreign countries.

Herein, education can become an asset and contribute to a country’s attractiveness. Providing financial assistance and scholarships in order to expand influence of culture and language improves the strong bond between bilateral relations and improve its image internationally. Therefore, expanding language educational networks supports Italy’s diplomacy and helps Sri Lanka too.

Application of cultural partnerships

In the cultural sphere, the Italian Embassy in Sri Lanka promotes Italian culture through various collaborations, enhancing mutual understanding between Italy and Sri Lanka. Introducing Italian culture, cinema, and performances, as well as Italian cuisine, fashion, and architecture, to Sri Lanka, and introducing Sri Lanka's rich culture to Italy, is a clear mode of cultural exchange that can be collaboratively developed to foster a deep understanding of lifestyles and build deep trust. It could enhance tourism, support cultural policy initiatives and indirectly influence trade and education as well. The key is designing programmes that align with broader state objectives. Cultural diplomacy is not just about showcasing beauty. When applied thoughtfully, even the local batik tradition, Sanni and Kolam masks and traditional dancing can become instruments of national strategy.

Italian cinema, with its artistic emotional depth, has captivated audiences worldwide. Through their masterpieces, Italy has showcased its culture, history and society values. Thus, Italy’s cinematic productions not only entertain they also become tools of cultural diplomacy, creating bridges between Italy and the world. This has enhanced international relationships and understanding through the universal language of film.

Italy has a long history of rich culture and is one of the countries that has placed great importance on fostering its culture abroad. In the Brand Finance Global Soft Power Index 2025, which evaluates all 193 member states of the United Nations (Jagodzinski, 2025) based on international influence through culture, business, and diplomacy, Italy maintains its strong position at 9th position out of 193 countries, indicating a consistent and powerful global influence.

With several medals including products and brands the world loves – ‘Culture & Heritage’, ‘Food the World Loves’, ‘Great Place to Visit’, and ‘Friendly’, Italy leads its rich culture in reshaping perceptions of its global standing. (Brand Finance Global Soft Power Index, 2025) which highlights Italy’s way of forward as a global influence in the context of soft power.

Italian cooking has been awarded special cultural heritage status by the United Nations' cultural agency, UNESCO (BBC, 2025). Italian cuisine is more than just food. It is a global cultural phenomenon, from pasta to pizza, it beautifully connects people, creating a shared sense of enjoyment. If the two countries start food exhibitions, leveraging Italian food culture in Sri Lanka, that would create more economic opportunities by embracing the Italian world heritage food culture among those who are enthusiastic on leveraging collaboration in cuisine.

When a country showcases its cultural heritage through exhibitions, performances, awareness programmes or educational programmes abroad, it can create a favourable image that can touch people’s emotions and values, shaping their perceptions of the country’s broader diplomatic intentions. The key to strengthening bilateral relations is addressing the lack of an Italian cultural institute in Sri Lanka and establishing a cultural centre that promotes collaborative projects and events, which could significantly benefit both countries and lead to more economic opportunities and a better understanding of diplomatic objectives.

Strengthening the digital platform and dialogues

In this globalised 21st century, the presence of digital platforms and media are essential for the promotion of culture, leveraging diplomatic networks among the international community. It is important to mention that with digital platforms there is capacity to reach a wider audience and achieve consistent and long-term outcomes. For example, the Sri Lankan diaspora in Italy, contributes to Italian society while maintaining good cultural links with their homeland, Sri Lanka. Through social media, many Sri Lankans share creative ideas and Italian culture with Sri Lankan society, promoting Italian content in an effective framework. Moreover, the promotion of dialogue between Italy and Sri Lanka, and promoting research on Italy and Sri Lanka’s politics, foreign policy, economy, culture, and society, deepens understanding about the two countries. Such measures are also important in developing collaborative initiatives, which open more opportunities for both countries. It contributes to the development of a positive attitude towards the country and to a broader application of the soft power in the present stage. Creating friendly networks that help bridge diverse and open new pathways toward cooperation.

Conclusion

Soft power can be very useful for a country, as it can achieve its goals simply because others admire and are influenced by it. This is the reason why, in the context of soft power, cultural diplomacy is very important. As a developing country, Sri Lanka has more measures that are required and much greater effort to achieve the economic progress of Italy, but these two countries are culturally diverse and have been diplomatically cordial towards each other since the establishment of diplomatic ties. Thus, soft power needs to be leveraged for the advancement of both countries’ ties.

Cultural diplomacy represents a tool in strengthening Sri Lanka-Italy bilateral relations. While economic and strategic cooperation remains important, culture provides a human-centred approach that builds trust, goodwill, and long-lasting partnerships between the two countries. By investing more systematically in cultural diplomacy, both countries can strengthen their bilateral relationship, enhance mutual understanding, and contribute positively to people-to-people connections in an increasingly interconnected world.

References

Cultural Diplomacy. (n.d.). Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation. https://www.esteri.it/en/diplomazia-culturale-e-diplomazia-scientifica/cultura/

Cummings, M. C. (2009, June 26). Cultural Diplomacy and the United States Government: A Survey. Americans for the Arts (formerly Center for Arts and Culture). https://www.americansforthearts.org/by-program/reports-and-data/legislation-policy/naappd/cultural-diplomacy-and-the-united-states-government-a-survey

Global Soft Power Index 2025. (2025). https://www.ucg.ac.me/skladiste/blog_45671/objava_195259/fajlovi/Global%20Soft%20Power%20Index%202025.pdf

Italy Sri Lanka Bilateral Relation. (n.d.). The Embassy of the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka - Italy. https://srilankaembassyrome.org/sri-lanka-profile/italy-sri-lanka-bilateral-relation/

Italy’s Deputy Minister for Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation to visit Sri Lanka. (2025, September). Lanka News Web. https://lankanewsweb.net/archives/123966/italys-deputy-minister-for-foreign-affairs-and-international-cooperation-to-visit-sri-lanka/

Jagodzinski, K. (2025, February). Global Soft Power Index 2025: The shifting balance of global Soft Power. Frand Finance. https://brandfinance.com/insights/global-soft-power-index-2025-the-shifting-balance-of-global-soft-power

Medici, L. (2019). Italy’s Cultural Diplomacy: From Propaganda to Cultural Cooperation. Świat Idei i Polityki, 18(2).

Monthly Tourists Arrivals Report: A Monthly Snapshot of International Arrivals to Sri Lanka from Immigration Statistics November 2025 (Monthly Tourist Arrivals Report). (2025). Sri lanka tourism Development Authority. https://www.sltda.gov.lk/storage/common_media/Monthly_Tourits_Arrivals_Report-November-2025-Final.pdf

Nye, J. S. (2004). SOFT POWER The Means to Success in World Politics. United States PublicAffairs. https://www.almendron.com/tribuna/wp-content/uploads/2020/02/joseph-s-nye-jr-soft-power.pdf

Prime Minister meets Italian Under Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation. (2025, September). News.Lk. https://news.lk/current-affairs/prime-minister-meets-italian-under-secretary-of-state-for-foreign-affairs-and-international-cooperation

Rizkiya, N. (2025, January 18). Sri Lanka ranked 9th best destination to travel in 2025 in BBC’s first-ever travel guide. Daily Mirror Online. https://www.dailymirror.lk/breaking-news/Sri-Lanka-ranked-9th-best-destination-to-travel-in-2025-in-BBCs-first-ever-travel-guide/108-300378

Scholarships offered by the Italian Government. (2025, April). Italian Embassy in Colombo. https://ambcolombo.esteri.it/en/news/dall_ambasciata/2025/04/scholarships-offered-by-the-italian-government/#:~:text=Please%20find%20at%20the%20following,courses%20eligible%20for%20the%20scholarships.

Sri Lanka and Italy renew Bilateral Agreement for Mutual Recognition of Driving Licenses. (2025, December). Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Foreign Employment and Tourism - Sri Lanka. https://mfa.gov.lk/en/sri-lanka-and-italy-renew-bilateral-agreement-for-mutual-recognition-of-driving-licenses/#:~:text=The%20agreement%20was%20first%20signed,Consular%20Affairs%20Division

Sri Lanka and Italy Successfully Concludes Inaugural Political Consultations. (2025, September). Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Foreign Employment and Tourism - Sri Lanka. https://mfa.gov.lk/en/sri-lanka-and-italy-successfully-concludes-inaugural-political-consultations/#:~:text=%E0%B6%8B%E0%B6%B4%E0%B6%AF%E0%B7%9A%E0%B7%81%E0%B6%B1%20%E0%B7%83%E0%B7%8F%E0%B6%9A%E0%B6%A0%E0%B7%8A%E0%B6%A1%E0%B7%8F%20%E0%B6%86%E0%B6%BB%E0%B6%B8%E0%B7%8A%E0%B6%B7%20%E0%B6%9A%E0%B7%92%E0%B6%BB%E0%B7%93%E0%B6%B8%E0%B6%A7%20%E0%B6%B4%E0%B7%99%E0%B6%BB,%E0%B6%AF%20%E0%B7%84%E0%B6%B8%E0%B7%94%E0%B7%80%E0%B7%93%20%E0%B6%B5%E0%B6%BD%E0%B6%AF%E0%B7%8F%E0%B6%BA%E0%B7%93%20%E0%B7%83%E0%B7%8F%E0%B6%9A%E0%B6%A0%E0%B7%8A%E0%B6%A1%E0%B7%8F%20%E0%B6%B4%E0%B7%90%E0%B7%80%E0%B7%90%E0%B6%AD%E0%B7%8A%E0%B7%80%E0%B7%93%E0%B6%BA.

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Saturday, September 20, 2025

CHINA – SRI LANKA RELATIONS: A New Chapter Opened in 2025

By Tharushika Peelikumbura and Yohan Soyza

In September 2024, Sri Lankans experienced a significant political shift in the country. 76 years of governance led by the United National Party, the Sri Lanka Freedom Party and its alliance, and later the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna, were rejected by the public. The National People’s Power won the presidential and parliamentary elections within two months. With that a new era of Sri Lankan politics began, and this article attempts to focus on a new era in China-Sri Lanka bilateral relations.

Newly elected Sri Lankan President Anura Kumara Dissanayake paid a four-day state visit to the People’s Republic of China from 14 to 17 January 2025. The Minister of Foreign Affairs, Foreign Employment, and Tourism, Vijitha Herath, the Minister of Transport, Highways, Ports, and Civil Aviation, Bimal Rathnayake and the Director General of Government Information, H. S. K. J. Bandara were seen joining the visit with Dissanayake. The four-day state visit included meetings with Chinese President Xi Jinping, Premier Li Qiang and Chairman of the Standing Committee of the National People’s Congress of China Zhao Leji and others. The visit was significant for the relations between the two countries as the Sri Lankan delegation met high-ranking members from the Chinese Communist Party, signaling increased cooperation in the future.

Key Diplomatic Objectives

1. Reaffirmation of the One China Policy

During his visit to the People’s Republic of China (PRC), President Dissanayake reaffirmed Sri Lanka’s continuous support for the One China Policy, recognizing the PRC as the only legitimate China that exists. He also assured his commitment not to allow Sri Lanka’s territory to be used for any anti-Chinese activities. This stance is aligned with Sri Lanka’s strong diplomatic relations with China since the 1950s (Kuruwita, 2025), and stronger than ever before since President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s time in the office from 2005 to 2015.

2. Strengthening Economic and Strategic Ties

This state visit aimed to strengthen strategic and economic ties between the two nations. Several agreements were signed to advance the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) projects, strengthen trade and investment, and promote cooperation in areas such as education, climate action and agriculture. China also pledged to support Sri Lanka’s debt restructuring efforts and encourage investments in areas such as green development and logistics (Kuruwita, 2025; Xinhua, 2025).

Both parties emphasized the importance of the cultural ties as mentioned in the joint statement between China and Sri Lanka, released in January 2025. Education and research were seen as significant opportunities to enhance cultural ties, as both parties promised to encourage more exchanges of students, teachers and researchers. China stated they welcome committed Sri Lankan students to pursue higher studies in China by providing them government scholarships, which will be a great chance for Sri Lankan students who wish to pursue their higher studies in a foreign university. China will also work with Sri Lanka to implement the Luban Workshop to create more professionals through vocational and technical training in Sri Lanka (Joint Statement between China and Sri Lanka, 2025)

3. Positioning within Global South multilateral frameworks

China and Sri Lanka emphasized global development initiatives and multilateralism. Both countries agreed to support each other by strengthening coordination and cooperation within large multilateral bodies like the United Nations Organization (UNO), and also to give focus on global issues such as climate change (Xinhua, 2025). Sri Lanka also seeks to leverage China’s BRI for development purposes and navigate risks in debt and regional power dynamics. The BRI is a great opportunity for Sri Lanka to enhance its network and connect with other partnering countries of the BRI.

Strategic Cooperation Areas

1. Development in Infrastructure

A major area of cooperation between the two countries includes infrastructure development, which is mainly led by the BRI. Notable projects in Sri Lanka include the Colombo Port City project and Hambantota Port. These projects can play a crucial role in Sri Lanka’s economic development and turn the island nation into a regional hub of business, transportation and maritime logistics if managed properly (Kuruwita, 2025; Xinhua, 2025). Table 1 provides an overview of the current ongoing Chinese projects in Sri Lanka.

2. BRI Project Advancement

The state visit also highlighted the importance of continuing BRI projects in Sri Lanka. China promised strong support for Sri Lanka’s economic development, sovereignty, and independence. Both countries also signed 15 new agreements covering areas including economic development, education, media, culture, infrastructure, agriculture, digital economy, and marine economy. President Xi emphasized the importance of fostering new highlights and high-quality cooperation within the BRI while building a community of shared future with Sri Lanka. In response, Sri Lanka pledged to further deepen regional connectivity and welcome more Chinese investments. This collaboration also includes infrastructure development and other forms of multilateral cooperation addressing climate change, demonstrating the expanding scope and depth of bilateral relations (Desheng, 2025).

3. Investment in Maritime Infrastructure

Sri Lanka and China have multiple agreements on developing maritime infrastructure under the BRI projects. These projects include Hambantota International Port (HPI), aiming to make Sri Lanka a major maritime hub in the Indian Ocean Region by providing services such as port, energy, marine and port investment (Hambantota International Port Group, n.d.). The project also aims to create job opportunities that are estimated at around 50,000. However, since 2017, Sri Lanka has leased the port for 99 years to China Merchants Ports Holding Company (CMPort) in a debt-for-equity swap deal. Therefore, Sri Lankan decision-makers should work carefully and maintain high standards to maximize the benefits currently earning.

The Colombo Port City Project is another key project located on reclaimed land from the sea. The project is handled by the China Harbour Engineering Company (CHEC) (CHEC Port City Colombo (Pvt) Ltd - Sri Lanka, n.d.). The China Merchants Ports Holding Company (CMPH) operates the Colombo International Container Terminals (CICT) as a joint venture company with the Sri Lanka Port Authority (SLPA). The CICT is the only deep-water port in South Asia at the moment, and they also aim to increase the capacity of the terminal and manage the container traffic (Details Business Areas, 2018).

4. Economic Collaboration

This includes increasing trade and investment, promoting agricultural cooperation, and developing digital economy partnerships, as it is one of the fastest-developing sectors globally, contributing over 15% to global GDP (Wignaraja and De Zylva, 2018). China has also agreed to assist Sri Lanka in debt restructuring, education, tourism development, logistics and green development (Kuruwita, 2025). China is also focusing on a free trade agreement (FTA) with Sri Lanka, as they already reached one recently with the Maldives (Shivamurthy, 2025).

5. $3.7 billion Sinopec Oil Refinery Project in Hambantota

As a major point of President Dissanayake’s 2025 visit to China, both nations agreed to a $3.7 billion oil refinery project in Hambantota, Sri Lanka. Sinopec will lead this project as decided after a bidding process. This step indicates a shift towards partnerships based on investment rather than financial loans (Moramudali and Chen, 2025).

6. Renewal of Currency Swap Agreement

During the state visit two nations agreed on a currency swap renewal. This is a pivotal point of Sri Lanka’s debt restructuring and economic stabilizing process, and it will also enhance economic cooperation between the two old friends (Kuruwita, 2025).

7. Expanding Trade and Investment

Both countries are highly focused on expanding trade and investment to provide a more friendly business atmosphere for Chinese enterprises in Sri Lanka. Digital transformation, green development, and logistics are the main aspects to be focused on (Kuruwita, 2025; Xinhua, 2025)

Table 1 above indicates that China’s main focus on infrastructure projects in Sri Lanka was mainly on roads, airports, seaports, energy, the telecommunication sector and water supply projects. By investing in such infrastructure projects, China created interdependencies and leveraged them significantly. Sri Lanka, as a strategic point in the Indian Ocean, could be pivotal for China to ensure its regional power balance in South Asia. But during the civil war times, China emerged as a major donor and development partner (Shivamurthy, 2025), proving China’s caring role for Global South partners. The authors assume that providing development assistance is not just a strategic step, it is also a significant priority of uplifting the global south partners while developing itself, as China is doing. If the public could understand this with an open mind, this might be seen as a positive opportunity to develop the country.

What is important is that the Sri Lankan policymakers need to carefully manage Chinese development loans to gain the maximum benefits. In this case, transparency is very important as the government officials are responsible for every decision they take on behalf of the public, and the decisions need to be transparent to the public. Evaluating and reporting each project is also crucial as they can be used to plan future projects carefully.

Geopolitical Context

As President Anura Kumara Dissanayake sets out on a strategic partnership with China, the geopolitical context surrounding this initiative cannot be overlooked. The Indian Ocean remains significant for international relations, and Sri Lanka's geographical position makes it a critical player in the balance of power among regional powers. Sri Lanka must therefore navigate its aspirations cautiously, serving both its national interests and the demands of powerful neighbouring countries.

1. Balancing Relations with Regional Powers

By reaffirming its ties with China, Sri Lanka finds itself seeking a delicate balance between India and China, two strong neighbours. Sri Lankan leadership often emphasizes the need for a non-aligned foreign policy, which allows it to engage with both nations without compromising its sovereignty. A diplomatic quote that describes this approach is from Dissanayake himself in which he notes that "We thrive best when our partnerships create opportunities for all parties involved." (Deccan Herald, 2025).

2. Strategic Positioning in the Indian Ocean

The Indian Ocean is becoming increasingly significant for trade routes and military presence. Sri Lanka's decision to strengthen ties with China under the Belt and Road Initiative (BRI) will likely enhance its strategic location in the region. China’s investments in maritime infrastructure aim to secure its maritime silk route, while Sri Lanka benefits from development and trade opportunities (Ministry of Foreign Affairs of China, 2025). The growth in maritime infrastructure could lead to increased ship traffic through the Colombo harbour, thereby significantly boosting the Sri Lankan economy (Global Times, 2025).

3. Diplomatic Support in International Forums

In the face of global challenges, Sri Lanka's collaboration with China also opens avenues for diplomatic backing in international forums. China's weight in the United Nations and other multilateral organizations provides an opportunity for Sri Lanka to express its interests more clearly (Sunday Times, 2021). This collaboration may come in the form of backing during discussions related to climate change, economic development, and regional security matters, aligning with China's global objectives while benefiting Sri Lanka’s international standing.

Recommended Policy Actions

For Sri Lanka to fully gain the benefits of its deepening relationship with China, several policy actions have been highlighted by scholars and policy institutes. Firstly, diversifying economic partnerships is essential. While Chinese collaborations offer significant opportunities, overdependence poses long-term risks. Strengthening ties with ASEAN countries, the European Union, and India can enhance economic resilience and geopolitical balance (Observer Research Foundation, 2025). Secondly, leveraging Chinese investments strategically can catalyze broader development. Beyond infrastructure, Sri Lanka can use these investments to expand sectors like energy, technology, and manufacturing, provided the projects are managed with transparency and long-term sustainability in mind (Global Times, 2025). Thirdly, maintaining diplomatic flexibility is crucial. A dynamic foreign policy that balances relations with both China and India, while promoting regional multilateralism, can help Sri Lanka navigate shifting geopolitical dynamics (Gateway House, 2025).

Amidst these high-level strategies, several modest yet impactful actions remain underutilized. One such initiative is the formation of an independent Foreign Investment Impact Assessment Taskforce, including members from civil society, academia, and business, to review and publicly brief on major bilateral projects, thereby increasing transparency and public trust. Additionally, bilingual digital dashboards that track project progress, financial flows, and social outcomes could facilitate data-driven adjustments and citizen engagement. The government could also embed policy nudges into contracts, such as local hiring quotas, incentives for technology transfer, and environmental safeguards, all achievable without extensive legislative overhaul. Finally, introducing foreign policy literacy modules in secondary education would help cultivate a more informed and globally aware generation. These grassroots-oriented actions are low-cost, culturally resonant, and politically feasible, yet they often remain sidelined in favor of grand diplomatic visions.

Potential Challenges

While the prospects of deepening relations with China appear promising, several well-documented challenges must be carefully managed. First, navigating regional power dynamics is crucial, as tensions between China and India over territorial disputes continue to escalate. Sri Lanka must tread carefully to avoid being drawn into broader geopolitical rivalries (Foreign Policy, 2024). Second, ensuring balanced international relations is vital. Strengthening ties with China should not come at the expense of alienating other key international partners, and a nuanced foreign policy is required to maintain this equilibrium (Deccan Herald, 2025). Third, the issue of maintaining economic sovereignty remains pressing. The influx of Chinese investments, while beneficial in the short term, may compromise Sri Lanka’s long-term control over strategic sectors unless protective mechanisms are in place (Chatham House, 2020).

Beyond these widely acknowledged strategic concerns, Sri Lanka also faces a set of more localized, systemic challenges that could quietly erode the benefits of foreign engagement. Entrenched bureaucratic inefficiencies often stall the implementation of large-scale agreements, regardless of high-level diplomatic progress. Additionally, the politicization of foreign investments, where projects become mired in domestic party politics, can cause mismanagement, public opposition, or abandonment. Another underappreciated challenge is the limited institutional capacity to enforce environmental, labor, and transparency standards in megaprojects funded by foreign entities. This gap can lead to exploitation, unequal benefits, and environmental harm. Furthermore, low levels of public awareness regarding the long-term implications of international partnerships hinder civic engagement and accountability. If left unaddressed, these domestic vulnerabilities risk undermining even the most strategically sound bilateral initiatives.

Conclusion

The strategic visit of President Anura Kumara Dissanayake to China marked a significant milestone in the evolution of China-Sri Lanka relations. By deepening cooperation across multiple areas, reaffirming key diplomatic objectives, and maintaining a proactive diplomatic stance, Sri Lanka is poised to enhance its standing in the regional and global arena.

The evolving partnership between Sri Lanka and China presents a landscape rich with opportunity, but not without complexity. As strategic initiatives continue to deepen bilateral ties, Sri Lanka must remain vigilant in safeguarding its economic sovereignty, institutional integrity, and regional balance. The recent political transition signals a willingness to reset foreign policy priorities, but genuine success will depend not only on high-level diplomacy but also on transparent governance, inclusive development, and civic accountability.

In this significant chapter of its international engagement, Sri Lanka has the chance to reshape its role in the Indo-Pacific and the Global South. Whether it emerges as a strategic bridge or becomes strategically bridged over will depend on how well it can balance cooperation with caution, vision with vigilance. And here’s something to think about. If foreign partnerships are designed to build the nation’s future, should the people of that nation not be more actively involved in shaping how those partnerships unfold?

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