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News ID: 126619
Publish Date : 24 April 2024 - 22:00

Sri Lanka Inaugurates Project Carried Out by Iran

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (Dispatches) -- Iranian President Ebrahim Raisi said his country has proven the West doesn’t have a monopoly on technology while inaugurating a hydropower and irrigation project in Sri Lanka on Wednesday.
Raisi was the first Iranian president to visit Sri Lanka since Mahmoud Ahmadinejad visited the country in 2008.
“The Western countries tried to convince all others that knowledge and technology is exclusive to those countries,” Raisi said, addressing Sri Lanka’s President Ranil Wickremesinghe and other top officials. He added that the “idea” was rooted in “colonialism and arrogance” and that Iran was now able to share its knowledge with others, currently having projects in 20 countries.
The Uma Oya project, in the central Badulla district, was constructed with Iranian technical assistance. Valued at $514 million, it was started in 2010 by Iran’s FARAB engineering group and Iran initially provided $50 million. But in 2013, funding could not be continued because of international sanctions against Iran. The Sri Lankan government then decided to complete the project with its own funds using the same Iranian contractor.
The project was scheduled for completion in 2015 but was delayed by international sanctions against Iran, technical issues and the COVID-19 pandemic, the government said in a statement ahead of Raisi’s visit.
The project will add 290 GWh of electricity annually to the national grid and irrigate 4,500 hectares (11,100 acres) of new land and 1,500 hectares (3,700 acres) of existing agricultural land.
“Our enemies did not want Iran to develop and progress ... so the will and determination of the Iranian people were realized and our enemies were disappointed,” Raisi said.
Raisi and Wickremesinghe witnessed the signing of five memoranda of understanding and were scheduled to issue a joint statement.

 
Raisi arrived in Sri Lanka from Pakistan, where the two countries agreed to strengthen economic and security cooperation.
The Indian Ocean island nation declared bankruptcy in April 2022 with more than $83 billion in debt — more than half of it to foreign creditors. Wickremesinghe’s government secured an IMF four-year bailout package to rescue the country from its worst economic crisis.
President Raisi said, “We stand fully ready to further expand bilateral relations with all Asian countries, our neighboring countries, and sovereign and independent states.” 
Sri Lanka is a sovereign, independent country that has aligned policies with Iran, enabling cooperation to create a shining future for both nations, he added.
“What is common with us we should strengthen,” President Wickremesinghe said at the event. “We are all countries that belong to the south at a time when the south wants to establish its own identity and its own independence.”
He was referring to the concept of the global south, which emerged to designate developing, emerging or lower-income countries, mostly in the southern hemisphere, and replace the term “Third World” after the Cold War ended.