Amnesty: Creditors should provide debt relief to Sri Lanka

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Amnesty: Creditors Should Provide Debt Relief To Sri Lanka
Sri Lankan people, © AP/Press Association Images
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By Bharatha Mallawarachi, AP

International creditors should provide debt relief to Sri Lanka to alleviate suffering as its people endure hunger, worsening poverty and shortages of basic supplies, Amnesty International has said.

For months, Sri Lanka has been in the grip of a dire economic crisis and the country has defaulted on its foreign loans.

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The government is in talks with its creditors on restructuring its more than 51 billion dollars (£44.7 billion) in total foreign debt.

A preliminary agreement with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for a 2.9 billion dollar (£2.5 billion) relief package hinges on other creditors giving assurances on loan restructuring.


Lenders should ensure that “their human rights responsibilities and Sri Lanka’s human rights obligations are central to any future commitments around Sri Lanka’s debt, including restructuring and changes to the terms of repayment”, Amnesty International said.

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“For months now, the people of Sri Lanka have been suffering from severe shortages of food and have struggled to access healthcare, while sky-high inflation has exacerbated already existing patterns of inequality,” the group said in releasing its latest report on the Indian Ocean nation.

Its title is: “We are near total breakdown.”

As Sri Lanka’s foreign exchange reserves dwindled, shortages of essentials such as fuel, medicine and cooking gas deepened. Cooking gas supplies were restored through World Bank support, but shortfalls of fuel, critical medicines and some food items persist.


A father and son in a shanty town
A father and son share a meal at their shanty in Colombo, Sri Lanka (AP)

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Amnesty urged Sri Lanka’s leaders and the international community to safeguard human rights in handling the crisis by increasing international assistance, ensuring comprehensive social protections and considering “all options for debt relief, including debt cancellation”.

Sanhita Ambast, group’s researcher on economic, social and cultural rights, said: “The Sri Lankan authorities and the international community must act quickly to mitigate the widespread human rights cost of the crisis, which has cruelly stripped away people’s access to their rights.”

The island’s economic crisis triggered extraordinary protests and unprecedented public rage that ultimately forced President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and his brother, the former prime minister, to step down.

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The pandemic and rising prices due to Russia’s invasion of Ukraine have deepened Sri Lanka’s woes. But many in the country hold the once-powerful Rajapaksa family responsible for severely mismanaging the economy and tipping it into crisis.

The Amnesty report said that as of June, about 11% of households reported receiving no income while 62% said their incomes had fallen.

Consumer inflation surged to a record of nearly 70% in September while food prices nearly doubled, according to the government’s latest statistics.

Agricultural yields dropped by more than half in the past two growing seasons because of a suspension of imports of chemical fertilisers, ostensibly to promote organic farming.

According to the World Food Programme, more than six million people – nearly 30% of Sri Lanka’s population – are currently facing food insecurity and require humanitarian assistance.

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