Sri Lanka president asks Russia’s Vladimir Putin to help import fuel

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The cash-strapped South Asian nation is also trying to attract more tourists, even as countries like Britain urge citizens to avoid unnecessary travel there.
Image: Autorickshaw drivers queue along a street to buy gasoline from a fuel station in Colombo, Sri Lanka, on July 6, 2022.
Autorickshaw drivers lined up to buy gasoline in Colombo, Sri Lanka, on Wednesday.AFP - Getty Images

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka — Sri Lanka’s president on Wednesday said he urged Russian leader Vladimir Putin to help his cash-strapped island nation import fuel as it faces its worst economic crisis in seven decades.

Short of foreign exchange because of economic mismanagement and the impact of the coronavirus pandemic, Sri Lanka has been struggling to import even essentials, leading to severe shortages of medicine, food and fuel.

“Had a very productive telecon with the #Russia President, Vladimir Putin,” President Gotabaya Rajapaksa said on Twitter, adding that he had requested credit support from Russia to import fuel.

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With its gas and diesel stocks nearly exhausted, Sri Lanka has extended a countrywide school shutdown and asked public employees to work from home.

Sri Lanka has already bought oil from Russia to tide it over the crisis, and the government has indicated it is willing to make further purchases.

“We unanimously agreed that strengthening bilateral relations in sectors such as tourism, trade & culture was paramount in reinforcing the friendship our two nations share,” Rajapaksa said.

Sri Lanka will also hold road shows in five Indian cities to attract more visitors from its populous northern neighbor to bring in more foreign currency, its tourism minister said.

Known for its rolling hills, pristine beaches and laidback seaside towns, Sri Lanka has seen a steady trickle of 61,951 Indian tourists — the most from any foreign country — in the first five months of this year.

“Sri Lanka must have tourism revenue if it is to emerge from this crisis. That is essential,” Tourism Minister Harin Fernando told reporters.

Image: Police use water canon to disperse farmers during an anti-government protest demanding the resignation of Sri Lanka's President Gotabaya Rajapaksa over the country's ongoing economic crisis in Colombo, Sri Lanka on July 6, 2022.
Police use water cannon to disperse antigovernment protesters in Colombo on Wednesday.AFP - Getty Images

Fernando said he hoped the country would end the year with about one million tourists, compared with fewer than 200,000 arrivals last year, even though some countries, including Britain, have issued advisories asking citizens to undertake only essential travel to Sri Lanka.

“We are confident the winter season will be good,” Fernando said.

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