Andy Mukherjee, Columnist

No Chinese Belt, Road or Bedrooms for Mahathir’s Malaysia

The prime minister is throwing up hurdles to China’s influence in the country.

Malaysia’s Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad has a waning appetite for Chinese influence in the country.

Photograph: Pool/Getty Images AsiaPac

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Perplexed, wounded, indignant or still optimistic. The Chinese developer Country Garden Holdings Co. can put any spin it wants on its Forest City project, a $100 billion Malaysian township whose fate suddenly has been thrown into doubt after Mahathir Mohamad’s pointed refusal to let foreigners buy apartments or live in them long-term.

One thing is clear, though: The prime minister is not acting impulsively. The project claims to be a “new global cluster of commerce and culture,” and a “dream paradise for all mankind.” However, in Malaysian political discourse, Forest City is just a gigantic Chinatown of 700,000 residents. Taking on the developer is part of Mahathir’s broader plan to redefine Malaysia’s relationship with Beijing, pulling Kuala Lumpur away from the client-state mindset introduced by his predecessor.