The Japan Times - Sri Lanka shares plunge as Buddhist leaders ask govt to resign

EUR -
AED 3.810409
AFN 77.078609
ALL 99.09059
AMD 412.438115
ANG 1.860599
AOA 948.732705
ARS 1093.063284
AUD 1.660136
AWG 1.867385
AZN 1.773468
BAM 1.955981
BBD 2.084423
BDT 125.891634
BGN 1.954882
BHD 0.390929
BIF 3055.726574
BMD 1.037436
BND 1.40065
BOB 7.133659
BRL 5.973972
BSD 1.03231
BTN 89.955313
BWP 14.418541
BYN 3.378494
BYR 20333.743121
BZD 2.073722
CAD 1.488041
CDF 2956.691887
CHF 0.939711
CLF 0.026283
CLP 1008.589757
CNY 7.556165
CNH 7.559468
COP 4321.69849
CRC 522.460873
CUC 1.037436
CUP 27.492051
CVE 110.275191
CZK 25.159066
DJF 183.839647
DKK 7.45946
DOP 63.797433
DZD 140.71706
EGP 52.207509
ERN 15.561538
ETB 132.098091
FJD 2.402691
FKP 0.854419
GBP 0.832148
GEL 2.946082
GGP 0.854419
GHS 15.897469
GIP 0.854419
GMD 74.695395
GNF 8922.953619
GTQ 7.979737
GYD 215.97996
HKD 8.080998
HNL 26.299064
HRK 7.655808
HTG 135.034431
HUF 407.296803
IDR 16940.445994
ILS 3.702028
IMP 0.854419
INR 90.467007
IQD 1352.324974
IRR 43676.050521
ISK 146.744989
JEP 0.854419
JMD 162.607378
JOD 0.735959
JPY 159.176864
KES 134.033588
KGS 90.723896
KHR 4151.443676
KMF 496.776255
KPW 933.692401
KRW 1503.255129
KWD 0.320059
KYD 0.860275
KZT 536.426988
LAK 22456.399974
LBP 92447.671242
LKR 309.24305
LRD 205.438985
LSL 19.375271
LTL 3.063279
LVL 0.627535
LYD 5.090544
MAD 10.404261
MDL 19.393073
MGA 4846.51796
MKD 61.524377
MMK 3369.551249
MNT 3525.207209
MOP 8.280465
MRU 41.211404
MUR 48.438049
MVR 15.973769
MWK 1790.091312
MXN 21.27558
MYR 4.596362
MZN 66.290448
NAD 19.374897
NGN 1544.036494
NIO 37.993694
NOK 11.672201
NPR 143.93177
NZD 1.834565
OMR 0.399423
PAB 1.032295
PEN 3.825754
PGK 4.203469
PHP 60.229402
PKR 287.973476
PLN 4.210589
PYG 8128.868754
QAR 3.763648
RON 4.976167
RSD 117.098542
RUB 104.467853
RWF 1458.155837
SAR 3.891066
SBD 8.792461
SCR 14.862362
SDG 623.498857
SEK 11.389407
SGD 1.403272
SHP 0.854419
SLE 23.753648
SLL 21754.511467
SOS 589.963051
SRD 36.419225
STD 21472.828007
SVC 9.032835
SYP 13488.741212
SZL 19.36907
THB 34.961729
TJS 11.25244
TMT 3.631026
TND 3.313906
TOP 2.429782
TRY 37.299656
TTD 7.001748
TWD 34.11463
TZS 2641.601154
UAH 43.086205
UGX 3799.351113
USD 1.037436
UYU 44.534116
UZS 13405.23883
VES 60.91824
VND 26133.009653
VUV 123.16647
WST 2.905678
XAF 656.027111
XAG 0.032148
XAU 0.000363
XCD 2.803723
XDR 0.791785
XOF 656.027111
XPF 119.331742
YER 258.111196
ZAR 19.394966
ZMK 9338.162949
ZMW 29.035103
ZWL 334.053928
  • RBGPF

    0.2700

    66.27

    +0.41%

  • RYCEF

    0.0500

    7.4

    +0.68%

  • BCE

    0.3700

    24.4

    +1.52%

  • CMSD

    -0.0700

    23.68

    -0.3%

  • BCC

    0.4300

    125.57

    +0.34%

  • SCS

    0.2400

    11.31

    +2.12%

  • CMSC

    -0.0100

    23.34

    -0.04%

  • RIO

    1.3500

    61.2

    +2.21%

  • RELX

    0.0100

    49.86

    +0.02%

  • BP

    0.7700

    31.64

    +2.43%

  • GSK

    -0.0600

    34.84

    -0.17%

  • JRI

    0.1800

    12.64

    +1.42%

  • NGG

    -0.1500

    61.86

    -0.24%

  • VOD

    -0.2900

    8.2

    -3.54%

  • BTI

    0.4900

    40.23

    +1.22%

  • AZN

    -0.9000

    68.96

    -1.31%

Sri Lanka shares plunge as Buddhist leaders ask govt to resign

Sri Lanka shares plunge as Buddhist leaders ask govt to resign

Sri Lanka's stock market halted trading after a nearly 13 percent plunge Monday as the island nation's beleaguered government faces new pressure to resign from influential Buddhist leaders over a crippling economic crisis.

Text size:

The country's worst downturn since independence in 1948 has brought widespread hardships to its 22 million people, with months of regular blackouts and acute shortages of food and fuel.

Monday was the first morning of trade on the Colombo bourse after a two-week break, during which the government imposed a record interest rate hike and defaulted on its $51 billion foreign debt.

But trading was halted after a frenzied market sell-off, and called off for the day entirely when a brief resumption failed to dampen the downward slide, with the local S&P index finishing 12.6 percent down.

Equities had already shed nearly 40 percent of their value since January and the local currency has fallen by a similar amount against the greenback in the past month.

The latest market crash came as the country's most influential Buddhist clerics joined a growing list of former allies calling for the government's resignation.

"The country is fast becoming a failed state," senior monk Medagama Dhammananda told reporters in the central city of Kandy.

Dhammananda said he and fellow Buddhist leaders had jointly petitioned President Gotabaya Rajapaksa to establish an interim government "to pull the country out of this crisis".

Such a move would require the resignation of Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa -- the president's brother and head of Sri Lanka's powerful ruling family.

Gotabaya has faced similar calls to step down, with thousands of protesters camped outside his seafront office in Colombo for more than two weeks.

Before the crisis, both men were beloved by much of the country's Sinhalese Buddhist majority for bringing a decades-long ethnic civil war against the Tamil Tigers to a brutal end.

Monday's rebuke from the Buddhist clergy is the latest public departure by formerly steadfast allies of the Rajapaksa clan.

Recent weeks have seen the fracturing of the government's ruling coalition, along with business leaders and a former cabinet minister urging the Rajapaksas to resign.

- 'Painful few years' -

Sri Lanka's economic collapse began to be felt after the coronavirus pandemic torpedoed vital revenue from tourism and remittances.

Utilities unable to pay for fuel imports have imposed lengthy daily blackouts to ration power, while long lines snake around service stations as people queue for petrol and kerosene.

Hospitals are short of vital medicines, the government has appealed to citizens abroad for donations and record inflation has added to everyday hardships.

Public anger over mismanagement of the crisis is at a fever pitch, with weeks of protests demanding the government's resignation around the island.

Last week a man was shot dead when police fired on a road blockade in the central town of Rambukkana, sparking further outrage against authorities.

Sri Lankan officials were in Washington last week to negotiate with the International Monetary Fund for a bailout, but official sources said there was no immediate prospect of emergency funding from the lender.

Colombo is now banking on further bilateral help from India, China and Japan to help keep the country afloat, a finance ministry source told AFP.

Beijing's ambassador to Colombo, Qi Zhenhong, said his country was already involved in "all-out efforts" to help Sri Lanka and said European former colonial powers should also lend their assistance.

Finance minister Ali Sabry, who is part of the Washington delegation, warned last week that the economic situation would likely deteriorate even further.

"It is going to get worse before it gets better," Sabry told reporters. "It is going to be a painful few years ahead."

M.Yamazaki--JT