Blog

  • Home
Mohamed-Muizzu-(R)-and-Chinese-leader-Xi-Jining

China Sends Over a Million Bottles of Tibet Glacier Water to Parched Maldives Amid Growing Bilateral Ties

Maldives has received a Chinese donation of 1500 metric tons of glacier water from Tibet, according to an announcement by its government on Tuesday. The gift of over a million bottles of water comes amidst growing bilateral ties between the two countries and immediately after the signing of a military assistance pact between them early this month.

Experts have described China’s donation both as a diplomatic tactic and an attempt to capture the thirst-driven market in the island nation. The supply of fresh water in the Maldives, where 25 percent of the gross domestic product comes from tourism, is precarious. The only available natural water resources in the islands are rain and groundwater, which is severely depleted.

The Beijing appointed chairman of the Tibet Autonomous Region (TAR), Yan Jinhai, met with Maldives President Mohamed Muizzu in the nation’s capital of Male last year and expressed an intention to provide water to the archipelago nation, according to Maldivian media The Edition on Wednesday.

“At the time, it was deliberated to donate water that is produced out of frozen water procured from glacial regions which is highly clean, clear, and rich in minerals,” The Edition said.

Mr. Muizzu has been in the news for his pro-China stance after a visit to Beijing in January, during which he signed 20 agreements with China. The news of China’s water aid to Maldives was discussed on social media in that context, with some even speculating that the water was for Mr. Muizzu’s consumption.

However, the Maldives’ foreign minister denied these allegations in a statement, reported The Times of India.

“The government of Maldives has decided to utilise the water to provide assistance to islands in case of water shortage,” said the statement.


Water and Diplomacy


The Maldives’ water shortage has been worsening for many years and is connected to rising sea water levels in the low-lying archipelago. Its groundwater reserves are almost depleted and the country relies on desalination plants for public consumption.


In this urgent context, an expert told The Epoch Times that the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) is using its water aid to the Maldives as a diplomatic tactic to win support for its harsh policies in Tibet and Xinjiang.


“[Communist] China has utter disregard for ethics, law, consensus, environment and this epitomizes the identity of China,” K. Siddhartha, India-based earth scientist and author told The Epoch Times in an email.


Maldives has been the stage of a recent tug-of-war between China and India, its immediate neighbor. The last water aid to the Maldives was provided both by Beijing and New Delhi in 2014 after a water purification plant in Male caught fire, leaving the country without drinking water.


However, no such incident was reported before this week’s donation. Instead, the shipment of 90 sea containers of water from Tibet was framed simply as a gift. “The Chairman of Xizang Autonomous Region announced his wish to donate 1,500 tonnes of drinking water … during his official visit to the country in November,” according to a statement from the Maldives foreign ministry.


Occurring amidst increasingly close relations between Male and Beijing and immediately after the signing of a military assistance pact between the two countries, the donation gave rise to much analysis.

Moreover, the military assistance pact happened immediately after Indian troops pulled out of the archipelago following Mr. Muizzu’s persistent calls for their removal.


According to Mr. Siddhartha, China has a multi-part plan for the Maldives, a South Asian Muslim-majority country of only over 518,000 people.


“Controlling Maldives as a bulwark against India in [the] Indian Ocean. Making … sure that Maldivians do not utter a word against the Uighur atrocities. Having a readymade support for another atrocity that will be on the rise in the coming years,” he said, referring to the persecution of Tibetans and the exploitation of Tibet’s resources.
Winning a Market for Premium Bottled Water.


However, an expert of Tibetan origin believes that China’s donation of “highly clean, clear and rich in minerals” water to the Maldives is also a means to create a market for China’s mineral water companies, which are largely based in Tibet. The Maldives’ need for quality water —not just for its population but also for its high-end tourism industry —could prove very lucrative for China.


Dechen Palmo is a research fellow at the Tibet Policy Institute (TPI)’s Environment and Development Desk. She told The Epoch Times that the TAR started an initiative called “Sharing Tibet’s Rivers with the World” in 2014 and signed a contract with 16 major companies to expand the water bottling industry in Tibet.


Reports about China’s bottled water industry based out of Tibet started to appear after October 2015, when the TAR government released a 10- year plan, the “Tibet Autonomous Region Natural Drinking Water Industry Development Plan.”

According to Chinese state media Xinhua, the plan aimed to develop “middle and high-end consumption water” while “relying on plateau biological resources, focusing on the development of plateau specialty drinks.”


The plan aimed to reach production of 5 million tons by 2020. Ms. Palmo, who studies Tibet’s transboundary rivers, said there isn’t any specific information about the source of the water donated to Maldives.


“However, the Maldives’ Ministry of Foreign Affairs talked about Tibet’s high-cost premium brand of water. So I think that they were talking about 5100 water bottles,” Ms. Palmo said, referring to Tibet 5100, a premium mineral water brand produced by Tibet Water Resources Ltd. The company, formerly known as Tibet 5100 Water Resources Holdings Ltd., is listed on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange, the first company from Tibet to do so.


The gift of water from Tibet’s high elevation springs could be a potentially profitable strategy to expand its market there, she said.

By Venus Upadhayaya | 3/29/2024
Source: www.theepochtimes.com

Photo Source: Maldives’ President Mohamed Muizzu (R) and Chinese leader Xi Jinping walk together at a welcome ceremony at the Great Hall of the People in Beijing, on Jan. 10, 2024. (STR/CNS/AFP via Getty Images)

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *