Millennium Post

PM Wickremesi­nghe proposes to privatise Srilankan Airlines

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COLOMBO: Sri Lanka’s new Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe on Monday said he proposed to privatise the national carrier Srilankan Airlnes as part of his plan to help tackle the debt-ridden country’s crippling economic and political crisis.

Sri Lanka is currently experienci­ng its worst economic crisis since gaining independen­ce from Britain in 1948.

“I propose that the loss making Sri Lankan Airlines be privatised, Wickremesi­nghe said in his first address to the nation.

Srilankan Airlnes made large losses after former Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa removed Emirates as its managing shareholde­r, the Economy Next website reported.

In the 20/21 year alone its loss was 45 billion rupees. By 2021 March 31 its total losses were 372 billion rupees,” the prime minister said while announcing other measures to tackle the problems faced by Sri Lanka’s economy.

Even if we privatise it we have to bear the loss, he said. You should note that this loss has to be borne by the poorest of the poor who has not set foot in an aircraft, Wickremesi­nghe said.

Wickremesi­nghe was unable to privatise Srilanka in an administra­tion he ran from 2015 to 2019.

Launched in 1979, Srilankan Airlnes has a global route network of 126 destinatio­ns in 61 countries.

Last month, Srilankan Airlines said it recorded its first profitable fourth quarter (Q4) since 2006 for the financial year that ended on March 31, 2022 with a group net profit of $1.7 million despite pandemic challenges.

Sri Lanka is grappling with a devastatin­g economic crisis, with prices of everyday goods soaring, and there have been widespread electricit­y shortages for weeks.

Since March, thousands of anti-government protesters have taken to the streets, demanding that the government resign.

In a pre-dawn operation, the Sri Lankan military had to evacuate Mahinda Rajapaksa hours after he resigned. Mahinda Rajapaksa, the elder brother of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa resigned from his post following clashes between pro and anti-government protesters.

The military were called after protesters twice tried to breach the Prime Minister’s Temple Trees private residence compound overnight.

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