Much of the infrastructure for the Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting (CHOGM) in Colombo was funded by China, including a USD 292 million highway connecting the capital's international airport to the main city, that whisked thousands of delegates, state-run Xinhua news agency reported.
The venues for the opening ceremony and the main sessions of the CHOGM were also built or refurbished by funds from China, reflecting on the close ties between Colombo and Beijing, the report said.
Three Chinese companies has signed deals worth over USD 1.5 billion with Sri Lanka at the Commonwealth Business Forum (CBF), held on the sidelines of this week's CHOGM summit.
The CBF saw a record attendance by 95 countries, including a 100 member delegation from China, the largest from a non-Commonwealth nation.
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The China Communications Construction Company signed preliminary agreements to build a port city redefining the shoreline of capital Colombo at an investment of USD 1.3 billion, state-run Xinhua news agency reported.
The China Harbor Engineering Company signed agreements to build two hotels and a golf course with an investment exceeding USD 500 million during the CBF.
The three-day long 23rd CHOGM in Colombo ended today.
Since, Sri Lanka's three decade long war with LTTE ended in 2009, China has emerged as the island's largest creditor with USD 1.2 billion in loans in 2009 and USD 821 million in 2010.
Some of the biggest projects include a USD 1.3 billion coal power plant on the northwestern shore. There are a host of other investments in the south of the country that are estimated to exceed USD 4 billion, including a USD 1.2 billion harbour.