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The visiting Minister of Foreign Affairs and Law of Singapore, K. Shanmugam yesterday paid a courtesy call on President Maithripala Sirisena at the Presidential Secretariat - Pic by Sudath Silva
By Dharisha Bastians Singaporean Foreign Minister Kasiviswanathan Shanmugam wrapped up a visit to Colombo yesterday, pledging to encourage companies in his country to invest in Sri Lanka and offering training for Sri Lankan public officials, politicians and judges in key priority areas including finance and dealing with corruption. Speaking to select journalists in Colombo soon after a meeting with President Maithripala Sirisena, Shanmugam said Sri Lanka’s investment potential is very high, especially post-war. “Singapore is Sri Lanka’s third largest investor, small as we are,” Minister Shanmugam told reporters at Cinnamon Grand. The Foreign Minister said there was a high level of investor interest from Singapore. “The trick is always to actualise that interest, realise that interest. There are a number of areas that can be looked at - tourism, hospitality, logistics, housing,” Shanmugam said. He observed that Singaporean companies would make their own assessments based on macroeconomics and market potential. “But we will encourage them,” he promised. As a small country in a region which is growing strongly, the Singaporean Minister said Sri Lanka was “plugged in” to the economic growth of the region. “As your Prime Minister himself mentioned we are a key node in ASEAN. Singapore is effectively the regional financial centre. The Prime Minister is of the view that Sri Lanka and Singapore can work with each other for mutual benefit,” he said. He said that the two countries, which are part of a fast-growing region, boasted good geographic locations, human resource potential and other resources and these were all facts. “The fact of course doesn’t automatically mean that the vision can be realised. We have to work at it. We have to work closely as we have in the past to see what can be done,” the Minister said. Minister Shanmugam said that he and Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera had already identified four or five areas where public sector leaders, judges and other officials could go to Singapore to share experience. “We focus a lot on capacity building. If you look at Singapore, we are known for urban management, we are known for governance and a very low tolerance on corruption,” he asserted. Among South Asian countries, Sri Lanka has sent the largest number of officials - 2000 - to Singapore for training. Capacity building for corruption - a priority for the new unity Government - was not specifically discussed, the visiting Minister said. But he said that senior civil servants and political officials from different countries arrive for training in Singapore, to look at, among other things, the model and structure of how to deal with corruption. “We are open to sharing it. It is not a rocket science secret. If a specific request is made, we will share what we know,” he explained. In true Asian fashion, the Singaporean Minister explained that his country was not keen to ‘teach’ anything, but only to share experiences. “They could see the paths we have taken, avoid some of the mistakes we have made and maybe apply some of the things that have worked for us, adapted of course to local conditions. Minister Shanmugam also met Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, Foreign Minister Mangala Samaraweera, Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake and Central Bank Governor Arjuna Mahendran for breakfast last morning.