By P.K Balachandran
Down to the dregs in forex holdings, critically short of fuel and cooking gas and virtually abandoned by its friend China, Sri Lanka is giving up its prejudice against the US and the Middle Eastern Islamic countries and is seeking their help to tide over the multiple crises it is facing now.
At the end of June, the Lankan cabinet approved a proposal by Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe for implementing a program of the United States Agency for International Development (USAID) named “The Programme for a Democratic, Prosperous Sri Lanka with the Ability to Survive Amidst Disasters.” This program, to be executed with a grant of US$ 57 million, will concentrate on “productive democratic governance, growth based on a secure market, and strengthening the resources required to sustain pressure and stress.” The program will last till 2026.
To push through the deal, Prime Minister Wickremesinghe told the cabinet there was a precedent to follow. He recalled that in 2011 (when Mahinda Rajapaksa was President) Sri Lanka had signed two agreements with the US for funds for two projects, namely, a “programme to strengthen the cooperation for democratic good governance and social integrity” and a “programme to create a sustainable and covered economic development.” These two programmes had been implemented, he said and added that the proposed agreements with USAID would be on similar lines.
Contrasted with MCC
Interestingly, while the current deal sailed through the cabinet, a proposal to sign the US$ 480 million Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) compact by the Sirisena-Ranil Wickremesinghe government in 2019 was opposed tooth and nail by Lankan nationalists. This despite the fact that US$ 488 million was to be an outright grant.
The MCC’s project was intended to facilitate the reduction of traffic congestion in Colombo, modernise the bus service, and upgrade inter-provincial roads in Centre Sri Lanka. It also included support for government initiatives to improve land administration through better land registration methods. “Sri Lanka will retain oversight and control of all aspects of the proposed projects,” the US Embassy assured.
But nationalists alleged that the compact would seriously abridge Sri Lankan sovereignty. They opposed the several tax concessions to be given to US investments in MCC projects.
The successor government of Gotabaya Rajapaksa delayed the signing of the compact and in November 2021, President Gotabaya declared that he would never sign it. Subsequently, the US itself cancelled the MCC offers.
Supporters of the MCC compact point out that if the US$ 480 million grant had been accepted in 2019-2020, Sri Lanka would have mitigated the forex crisis which followed in 2021 and became acute in 2022. Valuable assets would have been created and rural land administration would have been toned up. Supporters of the pact pointed out that all decisions on the projects to be undertaken under the MCC were to be chosen by Sri Lankan officials. Furthermore, of there was a component in the pact which said that if the Lankan government did not wish to carry out any part of the project for some reason, it had the option of omitting these elements. But these provisions did not assuage the fears of the nationalists.
US Conditions
The latest agreements with USAID, are not well-defined in the public domain. And yet, the mood in the cabinet was such, that the proposals sailed through the cabinet. And there has been no adverse public reaction either. This is because the government is desperate to get the US on board in its bid to save the gravely ill economy.
But the US has put up its conditions too. It has made aid conditional on Sri Lanka’s accepting the IMF’s conditions which are expected to be announced by the end of July. Notably, the US Senate Foreign Relations Committee has stated that the IMF’s agreement with Sri Lanka must be contingent on the Sri Lankan Central Bank’s independence, strong anti-corruption measures and promotion of the rule of law.
“Without these critical reforms, Sri Lanka could suffer further economic mismanagement and uncontrollable debt,” the committee tweeted on July 2.
The IMF had said in a statement on June 30, that its 10-day talks with Sri Lanka would have to move forward on debt restructuring to finalise a bailout. “Because public debt is assessed as unsustainable, Executive Board approval would require adequate financing assurances from Sri Lanka’s creditors that debt sustainability will be restored,” the IMF said at the end of its meetings in Sri Lanka.
Sri Lanka’s inflation grew 54.6% in 12 months up to June 2022. Food prices rose 80.1% in the past year. The country is unable to import fuel to the extent needed because of a scarcity of forex and fuel sellers overseas are asking for advance payments or for guarantees from non-Sri Lankan banks.
Islamophobia Set Aside
Desperate to get fuel, the Gotabaya Rajapaksa government has shed its Islamophobia and sent a delegation to Qatar to fetch oil on credit. Power and Energy Minister Kanchana Wijesekera met Saad Sherida Al-Kaabi, the Qatar Minister of State for Energy Affairs, and the President and CEO of Qatar Energy, to get petroleum products, liquid petroleum (LP) gas and liquefied natural gas (LNG).
In the process, Sri Lanka had to backtrack on an earlier decision to ban Qatar Charity, a Qatar government organization, from working in Sri Lanka. The then Lankan National Security Minister Sarath Weerasekara banned Qatar Charity in January 2021 for alleged involvement in the serial suicide attacks involving Islamic terrorists in mid-2019. He told parliament that the ringleader of the Easter Sunday suicide bombers Zaharan Hashim had conducted lectures in an organisation maintained by Sri Lankan Muslim lawyer Hejaz Hisbullah. The organisation, named ‘Pearl of Unity’ had been funded by Qatar Charity which Weerasekara claimed was banned by the United Nations. The Criminal Investigation Department (CID) subsequently froze the accounts of Qatar Charity in Sri Lanka. The case involved Qatar Charity saw the arrest of Hejaz Hisbullah in April 2020 under the anti-terror act.
These steps, along with the Rajapaksa government’s ban on Muslims burying their COVID dead on the spurious ground that the burial of the COVID dead would contaminate groundwater, alienated the Muslim world.
However, despite the lifting of the ban on Qatar Charity, the Qatar authorities told minister Wijesekara that his country would help but would base its decisions on the IMF’s agreement with Sri Lanka. Therefore, the IMF’s recommendations and Sri Lanka’s willingness to implement them would be critical for aid flow.
The Ambassador of Oman, Al Shehhi, has told President Gotabaya that he would support Sri Lanka’s request. But there is a problem with Oman too. In January 2022, Sri Lanka decided not to go ahead with a US$ 3.6 billion fuel credit line agreement with Oman due to the condition that Lanka should give Oman an area for oil exploration in lieu of interest payments on the credit line. The loan was to be given in 12 monthly instalments of US$ 300 million with a repayment schedule of 15 years after a five-year grace period.
China Factor
Sri Lanka’s creditors would like debt restructuring, which is enjoined for all creditors, to cover loans from China too. But China is reluctant to agree to debt restructuring. The Western powers say that China’s loans are not transparent. Some loans are hidden. According to Lankan economist Umesh Moramudali, Chinese loans constitute 19.9% of the total foreign loans taken by Sri Lanka, but the official figure is 10%.
Till these matters are sorted out, Sri Lanka would have to lean heavily on India’s shoulders. It has so far given a credit line of US$ 4 billion according to the Lankan Prime Minister. But India appears to be at the end of its tether, itself importing fuel from Russia under trying conditions created by the US and Western sanctions against Russia for attacking Ukraine.