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Sri Lanka rushes to find fuel as shortages hit schools, workers

Reuters

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Sri Lanka rushes to find fuel as shortages hit schools, workers

FUEL SHORTAGE. Bikes are parked in a queue to buy gasoline, amid the country's economic crisis, in Colombo, Sri Lanka, June 28, 2022.

Dinuka Liyanawatte/Reuters

Sri Lanka closes urban schools and allows fuel supplies only to services deemed essential like health, trains, and buses

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka – A Sri Lankan government minister was in Qatar on Tuesday, June 28, and another will travel to Russia at the weekend in search of energy deals to alleviate a severe fuel shortage that is crippling the economy of the island nation and forcing many schools to close.

The South Asian country of 22 million people is in the grip of a financial crisis that has left currency reserves perilously low, making imports of essential goods including food, medicine, gasoline, and diesel increasingly difficult.

Protests, some of them violent, have erupted in recent months and key ministers have resigned, leaving President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe fighting to stabilize the nation.

In a step aimed at getting more fuel into Sri Lanka, the power and energy minister said on Tuesday that the duopoly controlling imports would end and companies from oil-producing countries would be allowed to enter the market.

The Cabinet decision came as the minister, Kanchana Wijesekera, headed to Qatar and a ministerial colleague was due to arrive in Russia on Sunday, July 3.

The government is also in talks with the International Monetary Fund over a loan package, and it has invited key partners India, China, and Japan to a donor conference to add to the billions of dollars in assistance already promised.

Data released on Tuesday underlined the damage the crisis has done to the economy.

Sri Lanka’s economy contracted by 1.6% in January to March over the same period in 2021, and analysts said higher inflation and political uncertainty could lead to up to a 5% contraction in the second quarter.

The turmoil has resulted from the confluence of the COVID-19 pandemic ravaging the country’s lucrative tourism industry and foreign workers’ remittances, ill-timed tax cuts by Rajapaksa that drained government coffers, and rising oil prices.

The government closed urban schools for about two weeks from Tuesday and allowed fuel supplies only to services deemed essential like health, trains, and buses as stocks would only last only a week or so based on regular demand. A government spokesman said on Monday, June 27, that people have been encouraged to work from home.

Ordinary people are increasingly looking for opportunities to leave the country and find a new life abroad.

Demand for passports has surged, and the navy said it had detained 47 people, including seven children, off the west coast late on Monday as they attempted to illegally migrate to Australia.

More than 120 people have been stopped in the past two weeks while trying to leave the country in small boats.

Russia ties

Wijesekera flew to Qatar late on Monday night while Education Minister Susil Premajayanth is due to arrive in Russia on Sunday.

Wijesekera hopes to find a long-term fuel supplier in Qatar who is “willing to work with Sri Lanka’s foreign exchange and other challenges,” said a ministry official, who declined to be identified as he is not authorized to speak to media.

Rajapaksa said on Twitter that he met the Russian ambassador, Yuri Materiy, on Monday. Sri Lanka last month bought 90,000 metric tons of Russian oil.

“Maintaining robust bilateral relations between our two countries, while focusing on developing trading opportunities was discussed extensively at this meeting,” Rajapaksa said.

Traffic was light on Tuesday on the streets of the main city Colombo, with schools shut and most public and private sector employees working from home.

But buses and trains were running and shops were open for groceries and other essentials.

The government said Sri Lanka would farm 250,000 hectares (617,763 acres) of unused land belonging to religious institutions including temples, churches, and mosques to help avert a looming food shortage in coming months.

Sri Lanka is facing the possibility of running out of staples, especially rice, partly due to a fall in production because of a ban on chemical fertilizer last year which has now been reversed.

Wickremesinghe told parliament this month that Sri Lanka needed about $5 billion to pay for imports including fuel, fertilizer, and food. – Rappler.com

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