Chinese ship leaves Sri Lanka after raising tensions with India, US

India and the United States had raised security concerns over the Yuan Wang 5 ship's visit to Sri Lanka, with New Delhi lodging a complaint that delayed the trip by a week.

When the vessel arrived last week, Chinese ambassador to Sri Lanka Qi Zhenhong said the port call was part of "normal exchanges between the two countries".
AFP

When the vessel arrived last week, Chinese ambassador to Sri Lanka Qi Zhenhong said the port call was part of "normal exchanges between the two countries".

A Chinese research vessel accused by India and the United States of spying activities has left Sri Lanka's Chinese-run port of Hambantota after a week-long stay.

"Our pilot is onboard and the ship is leaving port," a harbour official told AFP news agency on Monday as the vessel was being guided out by tug boats.

"They have given the port of Jiangyin as their next destination."

Colombo allowed the Yuan Wang 5 to visit the deep-sea port on the condition that it would not engage in research in Sri Lankan waters.

The vessel said to be carrying about 400 crew had set off from Jiangyin, in China's Jiangsu province, in mid-July.

Shipping analytics websites describe the Yuan Wang 5 as a research and survey vessel, but according to Indian media it is a dual-use spy ship.

READ MORE: Sri Lanka urges China to defer military ship visit after India's pressure

Concerns raised

Both India and the US had raised security concerns over the ship's visit to Sri Lanka, with New Delhi lodging a complaint — a move that delayed the visit by a week before Colombo announced a U-turn.

When the vessel arrived last week, Chinese ambassador to Sri Lanka Qi Zhenhong said the port call was part of "normal exchanges between the two countries".

There was no send-off ceremony at the Hambantota port, which has been run since 2017 by a Chinese state-owned company that took out a 99-year lease on it for $1.12 billion, less than the $1.4 billion Sri Lanka paid a Chinese firm to build it.

New Delhi is suspicious of Beijing's increasing presence in the Indian Ocean and activities in Sri Lanka, seeing both as firmly within its sphere of influence.

READ MORE: Chinese navy ship arrives at Sri Lanka port amid security concerns by India

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