Published on 12:00 AM, October 29, 2020

Pompeo slams ‘predator’ China on Sri Lanka trip

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo called China's Communist government a "predator "yesterday, during a trip to boost ties with Sri Lanka, which has received huge investment and diplomatic support from Beijing.

Pompeo made his latest attack on China after talks with President Gotabaya Rajapaksa on security cooperation to keep open vital Indian Ocean sea lanes just south of Sri Lanka.

"A strong sovereign Sri Lanka is a powerful strategic partner for the United States on the world stage," Pompeo told reporters as he wrapped up a 12-hour visit, the second stop on a four-nation tour.

Pompeo described how Washington has provided military training and recently gifted two coastguard vessels, contrasting its assistance with China.

"We see from bad deals, violations of sovereignty and lawlessness on land and sea that the Chinese Communist Party is a predator, and the United States comes in a different way, we come as a friend, and as a partner," Pompeo told a televised news conference in the capital, Colombo.

The Chinese embassy in Colombo hit back, tweeting a promotional image for the "Aliens vs Predator" video game.

"Sorry Mr. Secretary Pompeo, we're busy promoting China-Sri Lanka friendship and cooperation, not interested in your Alien v Predator game invitation," it said.

Sri Lanka's Foreign Minister Dinesh Gunawardena made no reference to China, but at a press conference with Pompeo, told reporters that the country maintains a non-aligned foreign policy.

Sri Lanka borrowed billons of dollars from China for infrastructure when Rajapaksa's brother Mahinda was the country's leader from 2005 until 2015. Unable to service a $1.4 billion loan to build a deep sea port, the country was forced to lease the port to a Chinese firm for 99 years in 2017.   

On Tuesday, the Chinese embassy accused Pompeo of trying to "coerce and bully" Sri Lanka with his visit.

Anti-China comments have been a key theme of Pompeo's Asian tour this week, which began in India and will now take him on to the Maldives and Indonesia.

China has in the past helped Sri Lanka fight off allegations of human rights violations, particularly in the final months of a decades-long civil war, when the current president was the country's top defence official. Washington has insisted on credible investigations into charges that Sri Lankan troops killed at least 40,000 civilians as they crushed Tamil Tiger separatist rebels in in 2009.