Eastern Eye (UK)

Sri Lanka yet to name finance minister

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CASH-STRAPPED Sri Lanka appointed six more ministers on Monday (23) to its new “economic war cabinet”, the president’s office said, but left vacant the crucial finance portfolio.

Sri Lanka is facing its worstever shortage of foreign exchange reserves, with the government unable to finance even the most essential imports such as food, fuel and medicines.

Last week, prime minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe’s office said the new premier was expected to be given the additional responsibi­lity of managing the country’s finances to pull it out of bankruptcy. There was no explanatio­n from president Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s office about why he was not given the job.

Political sources said several other legislator­s from the president’s Sri Lanka Podujana Peremuna (SLPP) party had declined to take up portfolios.

“There is tension between the SLPP and others in the unity

government,” a government official involved in the cabinet formation told AFP.

“At least four MPs have refused to take up ministries.”

Wickremesi­nghe took over earlier this month after Mahinda Rajapaksa, the president’s elder brother, resigned after months of anti-government protests turned violent, with at least nine people killed. Wickremesi­nghe, 73, had pledged to put together a crossparty coalition after the previous cabinet was dissolved.

The new ministers – for fisheries, agricultur­e, transport, environmen­t, culture and irrigation – were sworn in before the president at his tightly-guarded official residence in Colombo.

The delay in getting a finance minister could hinder the IMF negotiatio­ns about a bailout, the central bank chief warned last Thursday (19).

The country of 22 million people has been enduring severe economic hardships for months. Consumers have been unable to access petrol, diesel and cooking gas, while staple food has been rationed. The country is also facing record inflation and lengthy daily electricit­y blackouts.

Last month, Sri Lanka announced it would default on its $51 billion (£41bn) external loans.

 ?? ?? TENSIONS: Ranil Wickremesi­nghe
TENSIONS: Ranil Wickremesi­nghe

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