Oman Daily Observer

Sri Lanka govt says to take over $1.7 bn in debt owed to China

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COLOMBO: Crisis-hit Sri Lanka said on Monday it would take responsibi­lity for $1.7 billion owed to China by state enterprise­s as it seeks to sell them off and restructur­e its foreign debt to secure an IMF bailout.

The government of President Ranil Wickremesi­nghe is in talks with the Washington-based lender as it seeks funding to enable the island to recover from its worst-ever financial crisis.

His predecesso­r Gotabaya Rajapaksa was forced to flee the country and resign after demonstrat­ors overran his house following months of protests over the unpreceden­ted economic hardships faced by the 22 million population. Sri Lanka defaulted on its foreign debt in April and the IMF has said its borrowings must be “sustainabl­e” to unlock any new external funding. That will require its creditors to take a haircut on their loans, but China is its biggest lender and Beijing has given no indication it is willing to do so.

Wickremesi­nghe said $1.7 billion in loans taken from China’s Export-import Bank by three key loss-making stateowned enterprise­s (SOE) — the electricit­y utility, Port Authority, and Airport and Aviation Services — would be considered government debt.

Taking the loans off their books will strengthen their balance sheets, which could make them more attractive to buyers or outside investors. The IMF has said the country should also restructur­e its loss-making state enterprise­s.

Wickremesi­nghe signalled the selling-off of five stateowned companies, including the national carrier Srilankan Airlines to reduce the strain on the national budget.

 ?? ?? Sri Lanka’s President Ranil Wickremesi­nghe
Sri Lanka’s President Ranil Wickremesi­nghe

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