Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

IMF delegation arrives in crisis-hit Sri Lanka as fuel runs out

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REUTERS: An Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) team began bailout talks in Sri Lanka yesterday, with police called to escort a top government official to the negotiatio­ns after protesters angry about the economic crisis blockaded the Finance Ministry.

Economic mismanagem­ent and the COVID-19 pandemic have left Sri Lanka battling its worst financial problems in seven decades and a lack of foreign exchange has stalled imports of essentials including fuel, food and medicines.

The island nation of 22 million people is scrambling to get fuel shipments in the next three days, the energy minister told Reuters, as public disaffecti­on grows because of a persistent shortage of diesel and petrol.

Sri Lanka suspended payment on US $ 12 billion of foreign debt in April and sought the IMF support to put its messy public finances on track and access bridge financing.

A nine-member IMF team, which arrived in the commercial capital Colombo yesterday, held talks with Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe on how to structure what will be Sri Lanka’s 17th loan programme with the global lender.

“The prime minister commenced discussion­s with the IMF team,” Wickremesi­nghe’s office said in a statement.

But public distress at the prolonged shortages is growing and protesters blocked an entrance to the Finance Ministry so police had to go and fetch a top official due to attend the IMF talks.

“The protesters were not letting him leave. So, the police had to go in and get him out,” a government source, who declined to be identified, told Reuters.

Police said they had arrested 21 people for blocking the gates of the ministry, which adjoins the office of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, outside of which protesters have staged a sit-in since early April.

Sri Lankans angered by long waits, often overnight, in queues for fuel faced off with security forces over the weekend and troops at two petrol stations fired shots in the air to control the crowds, military spokesman Brigadier Nilantha Premaratne said.

Power and Energy Minister Kanchana Wijesekera said the country had only 12,300 tonnes of petrol and 40,000 tonnes of diesel, asking consumers not to queue for petrol for the next three days. “The Central Bank has released US $ 90 million to purchase two shipments. We are hoping a petrol shipment will arrive on Thursday and a diesel one on Friday,” Wijesekera told Reuters.

Dhananath Fernando of the Advocata Institute think tank said social unrest over the shortages was “highly likely”, even as Sri Lanka’s attempts to reach a preliminar­y agreement by the end of the delegation’s visit on June 30, with any serious relief funds still months away.

“Even if a staff-level agreement is reached, final programme approval will be contingent upon assurances that official creditors, including China, are willing to provide adequate debt relief,” said Patrick Curran, senior economist at U.S. investment research firm Tellimer.

“All considered, the restructur­ing is likely to be a protracted process.” Bondholder­s expect the IMF visit to give clarity on how much debt Sri Lanka can repay and what reduction in asset value investors may face.

“This IMF visit is very important – the country will need every help and support it can get,” said Lutz Roehmeyer, Portfolio Manager at Berlin-based bondholder Capitulum Asset Management.

“For many internatio­nal bondholder­s, this will be a key requiremen­t to ensure they come to the table and talk about a debt restructur­ing in the first place.”

Representa­tives from Sri Lanka’s financial and legal advisers, Lazard and Clifford Chance, are also in Colombo.

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