Crisis-hit Sri Lanka shuts schools, urges work from home to save fuel
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[June 27, 2022]
By Uditha Jayasinghe
COLOMBO (Reuters) - Troops in Sri Lanka handed tokens on Monday to
people queueing for petrol amid a severe fuel shortage in the nation
battling its worst economic crisis in seven decades, while schools shut
in Colombo and public employees were asked to work from home.
With its foreign exchange reserves at a record low, the island of 22
million is struggling to pay for essential imports of food, medicine and
most critically, fuel.
"I have been in line for four days, I haven't slept or eaten properly
during this time," said autorickshaw driver W.D. Shelton, 67, one of
those who received a token meant to hold his place in the queue for when
fuel becomes available.
"We can't earn, we can't feed our families," added Shelton, who was 24th
in line at a fuel station in the centre of Colombo, but set to stay
there as he had no petrol for the journey to his home just 5 km (3
miles) away.
It was not immediately clear how far the government could stretch its
fuel reserves.
The stockpiles stand at about 9,000 tonnes of diesel
and 6,000 tonnes of petrol, Power and Energy Minister Kanchana
Wijesekera said on Sunday, but no fresh shipments are due.
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Sri Lanka's Air Force members distribute tokens to people queueing
for fuel due to fuel shortage, amid the country's economic crisis,
in Colombo, Sri Lanka June 27, 2022. REUTERS/Dinuka Liyanawatte
The government has told employees to work from home until further
notice, while schools have been shut for a week in the commercial
capital of Colombo and surrounding areas.
Fuel station queues have grown rapidly since last week.
"This is a tragedy, we don't know where this will end," Shelton
said.
Public transport, power generation and medical services will get
priority in fuel distribution, with some rationed to ports and
airports.
A team from the International Monetary Fund is visiting Sri Lanka to
hold talks on a $3-billion bailout package.
Although the Indian Ocean nation is hoping to reach a staff-level
agreement before the visit ends on Thursday, that is unlikely to
unlock any immediate funds.
(Reporting by Uditha Jayasinghe; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
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