Colombo: The beleaguered Sri Lankan government has announced the closure of public sector offices from next week, starting Monday, as the island country grapples with its worst economic crisis due to severe fuel shortages.
Moreover, cardiac surgeons and cardiac anesthesiologists at national hospitals have claimed that they have decided to curtail several operations from Monday due to a shortage of medicines and consumables and a fuel crunch.
With its existing fuel stocks rapidly depleting, Sri Lanka is under intense pressure to obtain foreign exchange for its imports, which has brought many sectors of the country’s economy to a grinding halt.
As a result, spontaneous protests have been reported at filling stations across the country, where consumers have been waiting in long serpentine queues for fuel for hours.
“Taking into consideration the severe limits on fuel supply, the weak public transport system and the difficulty in using private vehicles, this circular allows minimal staff to report to work from Monday,” the Public Administration and Home Affairs Ministry said in a circular issued on Friday.
However, the circular said that those employed in the healthcare sector would have to continue to report at work.
The Sri Lankan Ministry of Education announced that all government and government-approved private schools in Colombo city limits would be closed next week due to prolonged power cuts; the Daily Mirror newspaper reported and asked teachers to conduct online classes.
Sri Lanka has been facing power cuts of up to 13 hours daily for the past several months.
Earlier this week, Sri Lanka’s cash-strapped government approved several measures, including imposing a 2.5 per cent social contribution tax on companies based on their turnover and declaring Fridays as holidays for most public sector employees to facilitate the economic recovery and mitigate the energy and food crisis.
The cabinet also approved a move to grant one holiday per week for the next three months to government officials to engage in agriculture to mitigate the impending food crisis.
On Friday, Sri Lankan Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe said about four to five million of the country’s 22 million population could be directly affected by food shortages.
The nearly bankrupt country, coupled with an acute foreign exchange crisis that resulted in foreign debt defaults, announced in April that it would defer foreign debt repayments of about USD 7 billion for this year out of about USD 25 billion due by 2026. is suspending.
Sri Lanka’s total external debt is $51 billion.