Schools were shut and state offices worked with skeleton staffing as part of government plans to reduce commuting and save precious petrol and diesel
Colombo, Sri Lanka: Sri Lanka closed schools and halted non-essential government services on Monday, starting a two-week shutdown to conserve fast-depleting fuel reserves as the IMF opened talks with Colombo on a possible bailout.
The country of 22 million people is in the grip of its worst economic crisis after running out of foreign exchange to finance even the most essential imports including food, fuel and medicines.
On Monday schools were shut and state offices worked with skeleton staffing as part of government plans to reduce commuting and save precious petrol and diesel.
Sri Lanka is facing record-high inflation and lengthy power blackouts that have contributed to months of protests—sometimes violent—calling on President Gotabaya Rajapaksa to step down.