Sri Lanka fuel shortage set to ease; police clash with protesters
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[May 19, 2022] By
Uditha Jayasinghe and Devjyot Ghoshal
COLOMBO (Reuters) -Sri Lanka's central bank
has secured foreign exchange to pay for fuel and cooking gas shipments
that will ease crippling shortages, its governor said on Thursday, but
police fired tear gas and water canon to push back student protesters.
Most of Sri Lanka's petrol stations have run dry as the island nation
battles its most devastating economic crisis since independence in 1948.
At some pumps in the commercial capital, Colombo, dozens of people stood
in lines holding plastic jerry cans, as troops in combat gear and armed
with assault rifles patrolled the streets. Traffic was extremely light.
Residents said most people were staying at home because of the lack of
transport.
Hundreds of students carrying black flags marched on Colombo's central
Fort area, chanting slogans against the government. Police fired
repeated rounds of tear gas and water canon to push them back, according
to a Reuters witness.
Central bank Governor P. Nandalal Weerasinghe told a news conference
adequate dollars had been released to pay for fuel and cooking gas
shipments, utilising in part $130 million received from the World Bank
and remittances from Sri Lankans working overseas.
He was speaking after the central bank held interest rates steady at a
policy meeting, citing a massive 7 percentage point increase in April
that it said was working its way through the system.
The country was more politically and economically stable, Weerasinghe
said, adding that he would stay on in his post. He told reporters on May
11 he would resign in two weeks in the absence of political stability as
any steps the bank took to address the economic crisis would not be
successful amid turmoil.
Opposition parliamentarian Ranil Wickremesinghe was named prime minister
last week and he has made four cabinet appointments. However, he has yet
to name a finance minister.
Inflation could rise further to a staggering 40% in the next couple of
months but it was being driven largely by supply-side pressures and
measures by the bank and government were already reining in demand-side
inflation, the central bank governor added.
Inflation hit 29.8% in April with food prices up 46.6% year-on-year.
Sri Lanka's economic crisis has come from the
confluence of the COVID-19 pandemic battering the tourism-reliant
economy, rising oil prices and populist tax cuts by the government of
President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and his brother, Mahinda, who resigned as
prime minister last week.
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People wait in a queue to buy kerosene at a fuel station, amid the
country's economic crisis in Colombo, Sri Lanka, May 18, 2022.
REUTERS/Adnan Abidi
Other factors have included heavily subsidised domestic prices of
fuel and a decision to ban the import of chemical fertilisers, which
devastated the agriculture sector.
TEST SUPPORT
Sri Lanka is also officially now in default on its sovereign debt as
a so-called grace period to make some already-overdue bond interest
payments expired on Wednesday.
Weerasinghe said plans for a debt restructuring were almost
finalised and he would be submitting a proposal to the cabinet soon.
"We are in pre-emptive default," he said. "Our position is very
clear, until there is a debt restructure, we cannot repay."
The central bank said energy and utility prices needed to be
urgently revised, and analysts said the prime minister's ability to
push reforms through parliament and overcome public anger would be
crucial.
"They need to bring in critical reforms and other measures to
parliament to test their support and see if they really have
consensus and stability," said Shehan Cooray, head of research at
Acuity Stockbrokers in Colombo.
He added, however, that the situation had taken a turn for the
better. "Given that there was a point where it was even difficult to
find a governor, the fact that he has decided to remain is a good
thing," Cooray said.
Wickremesinghe, speaking in parliament, said the government was
working to release six fuel shipments that had arrived at Colombo's
port.
"There are two petrol shipments among them but this will not end the
shortages," he said, adding that supplies had been locked in only
until mid-June.
"Our aim now is to reduce the lines and find a way to start a fuel
reserve so even if a couple of shipments are missed there is fuel
available."
However, there is considerable opposition to him. Protesters
agitating for the removal of the Rajapaksa brothers say he is their
stooge.
(Additional reporting by Swati Bhat; Writing by Raju Gopalakrishnan;
Editing by Robert Birsel and Chizu Nomiyama)
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