International

Sri Lanka Deploys Soldiers At Petrol Pumps As Country Faces Worst Financial Crisis

Four people have died in queues for fuel. Three senior citizens died of exhaustion while waiting in long queues for over six hours in heat and one died from stabbing in a scuffle..

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Representative image of a petrol pump
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Sri Lanka on Tuesday deployed military personnel at state-run petrol pumps to monitor and manage fuel distribution amid a shortage that led to long queues of consumers outside petrol pumps.


The island nation is facing an acute economic and energy crisis triggered due to shortage of foreign exchange. A sudden rise in prices of key commodities and fuel shortage forced tens of thousands of people to queue for hours outside petrol pumps. People are also facing long hours of power cuts daily.


Unarmed soldiers were seen at fuel retail stations run by state-owned Ceylon Petroleum Corporation (CPC) on Tuesday morning.

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Energy minister Gamini Lokug said to reporters, “We decided to deploy military personnel at petrol sheds to tackle unwanted situations where people are taking fuel in cans to do business. They will ensure that fuel is being distributed fairly amongst the people."


The troops are deployed at fuel retail stations where long queues were seen for weeks.


At least four deaths have been reported as people queued up for fuel. Of the four deaths, three were of senior citizens who died of exhaustion on Saturday while waiting in long queues outside petrol filling stations for over six hours in torrid heat and one was due to a stabbing that followed a scuffle at the fuel line on Sunday.

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The foreign exchange crisis halted smooth import of fuel, cooking gas and most essentials. The government has sought Indian credit lines to ensure supply of essentials, including fuel.


Last week India announced to extend a USD 1 billion line of credit to Sri Lanka as part of its financial assistance to help the country deal with the economic crisis. New Delhi had extended a USD 500 million line of credit to Colombo in February to help it purchase petroleum products.


Meanwhile, angry citizens accused the government of formulating short-sighted policies, which they said caused the crisis.


Sri Lanka is facing its all-time worst foreign exchange crisis after the pandemic hit the nation’s earnings from tourism and remittances. By December last year, the reserves' position had plummeted to just one month’s imports or a little over USD 1 billion.


The forex crisis triggered the energy shortage as Sri Lanka experienced loss of foreign reserves to fund imports on top of heavy international debt servicing obligations.


Sri Lanka had over USD 7.5 billion in debt payments to meet at the beginning of this year. A USD 500-million payment was made in January amidst calls from experts to default in order to fund imports.


Another USD 1 billion international bond payment is due in July. 

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