The Jerusalem Post

Cash-strapped Sri Lankan economy seeking solutions

- • By UDITHA JAYASINGHE and DEVJYOT GHOSHAL

COLOMBO (Reuters) – Sri Lanka’s President Gotabaya Rajapaksa announced 17 new ministeria­l appointmen­ts on Monday, but notably left out some members of his own family in the wake of protests over the government’s handling of a devastatin­g economic crisis.

The president and his elder brother, Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa, will stay on despite demands from protesters and the opposition for them to quit. Rajapaksa has governed the South Asian island nation since 2019 with numerous other family members in top government positions.

The island nation of 22 million people is experienci­ng prolonged power cuts and fuel and medicine shortages triggered by a tumble in its foreign exchange reserves that has stalled imports of essentials, leading to daily protests in the commercial capital Colombo.

The government is set to begin talks with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) on Monday for a loan program, and analysts have flagged political instabilit­y as a risk to Sri Lanka finding a way out of its financial turmoil.

In a speech to his new cabinet, Rajapaksa said he would seek solutions to Sri Lanka’s problems including via possible constituti­onal changes, according to a statement issued by his office.

“I stand ready to support parliament on constituti­onal changes that should be made,” he said.

Thousands of Sri Lankans have been protesting outside the president’s office in Colombo for over a week, demanding that the Rajapaksas resign.

Faced with growing popular unrest, Rajapaksa dissolved his previous cabinet earlier this month and invited all parties in parliament to form a unity government, but opposition groups and members of the ruling alliance rejected the idea.

On Monday, only five members of the previous cabinet were sworn in again, while most other portfolios were allocated to members of the ruling Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna Party.

Among those not reappointe­d from the previous cabinet were two more of the president’s brothers, Basil and Chamal, and the prime minister’s son Namal.

“It is the government’s responsibi­lity to put the economy on the right path and build a country that can achieve the aspiration­s of the younger generation,” the president said.

Economic mismanagem­ent by successive government­s weakened Sri Lanka’s public finances, but the situation was exacerbate­d by deep tax cuts enacted by the Rajapaksa administra­tion soon after it took office in 2019.

Key sectors of the economy, particular­ly tourism, were then battered by the COVID-19 pandemic, while the government dragged its feet on approachin­g the IMF for help.

Last week, the country’s central bank said it was unilateral­ly suspending external debt payments, instead using the paltry foreign reserves of around $1.93 billion for importing essential goods.

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