The Japan Times - Hunger pains on Slave Island as Sri Lanka's food prices rocket

EUR -
AED 3.795051
AFN 76.905252
ALL 98.798207
AMD 414.66656
ANG 1.870598
AOA 943.848309
ARS 1093.833705
AUD 1.647875
AWG 1.862375
AZN 1.760572
BAM 1.955171
BBD 2.095626
BDT 126.56927
BGN 1.952062
BHD 0.391274
BIF 3072.711203
BMD 1.033218
BND 1.401749
BOB 7.171692
BRL 5.999382
BSD 1.037866
BTN 90.790784
BWP 14.35638
BYN 3.396707
BYR 20251.063216
BZD 2.084829
CAD 1.47714
CDF 2949.836368
CHF 0.940122
CLF 0.025884
CLP 993.29036
CNY 7.529887
CNH 7.546363
COP 4291.818894
CRC 529.029758
CUC 1.033218
CUP 27.380264
CVE 110.229528
CZK 25.131677
DJF 184.830522
DKK 7.463912
DOP 64.399276
DZD 139.539096
EGP 51.929289
ERN 15.498263
ETB 132.81586
FJD 2.390146
FKP 0.850945
GBP 0.833072
GEL 2.872748
GGP 0.850945
GHS 16.03584
GIP 0.850945
GMD 74.392028
GNF 8973.112456
GTQ 8.025417
GYD 217.579983
HKD 8.049023
HNL 26.452488
HRK 7.624678
HTG 135.756314
HUF 405.372959
IDR 16888.198522
ILS 3.675413
IMP 0.850945
INR 90.705391
IQD 1359.662461
IRR 43498.457578
ISK 146.696621
JEP 0.850945
JMD 163.997226
JOD 0.732969
JPY 156.425519
KES 133.99688
KGS 90.355268
KHR 4169.658206
KMF 492.332064
KPW 929.895875
KRW 1507.764378
KWD 0.31882
KYD 0.864922
KZT 529.259684
LAK 22549.743502
LBP 92945.390211
LKR 308.520718
LRD 206.543534
LSL 19.131843
LTL 3.050823
LVL 0.624983
LYD 5.09636
MAD 10.384558
MDL 19.460738
MGA 4890.426263
MKD 61.515204
MMK 3355.850172
MNT 3510.873213
MOP 8.32712
MRU 41.568623
MUR 48.255123
MVR 15.922273
MWK 1799.720851
MXN 21.254735
MYR 4.588006
MZN 66.033321
NAD 19.131843
NGN 1548.493805
NIO 38.197708
NOK 11.617812
NPR 145.265254
NZD 1.826603
OMR 0.397482
PAB 1.037866
PEN 3.857159
PGK 4.168659
PHP 59.988996
PKR 289.630497
PLN 4.22532
PYG 8186.365631
QAR 3.784182
RON 4.972053
RSD 117.022342
RUB 100.717589
RWF 1463.429069
SAR 3.87506
SBD 8.727396
SCR 15.595425
SDG 620.964075
SEK 11.304643
SGD 1.398257
SHP 0.850945
SLE 23.495749
SLL 21666.054515
SOS 593.209106
SRD 36.27114
STD 21385.51642
SVC 9.082077
SYP 13433.894063
SZL 19.125845
THB 35.020947
TJS 11.359944
TMT 3.626593
TND 3.314633
TOP 2.419903
TRY 37.075775
TTD 7.041734
TWD 33.933863
TZS 2667.441618
UAH 43.017857
UGX 3811.773373
USD 1.033218
UYU 45.145472
UZS 13448.672223
VES 62.441248
VND 26150.735204
VUV 122.665658
WST 2.893863
XAF 655.745981
XAG 0.032472
XAU 0.000361
XCD 2.792322
XDR 0.796044
XOF 655.745981
XPF 119.331742
YER 257.323196
ZAR 19.020815
ZMK 9300.201166
ZMW 29.035656
ZWL 332.695617
  • SCS

    -0.2200

    11.36

    -1.94%

  • BCC

    -1.8300

    123.28

    -1.48%

  • NGG

    -0.1300

    61.54

    -0.21%

  • RIO

    -0.2400

    61.95

    -0.39%

  • GSK

    -0.3400

    36.04

    -0.94%

  • RBGPF

    67.2100

    67.21

    +100%

  • CMSD

    -0.0800

    23.75

    -0.34%

  • CMSC

    -0.0700

    23.37

    -0.3%

  • BCE

    -1.3800

    22.14

    -6.23%

  • JRI

    -0.0200

    12.81

    -0.16%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0300

    7.42

    -0.4%

  • RELX

    -0.4100

    49.99

    -0.82%

  • AZN

    -0.3700

    71.99

    -0.51%

  • BP

    0.3100

    32.27

    +0.96%

  • VOD

    0.1300

    8.57

    +1.52%

  • BTI

    0.1400

    41.76

    +0.34%

Hunger pains on Slave Island as Sri Lanka's food prices rocket
Hunger pains on Slave Island as Sri Lanka's food prices rocket / Photo: Arun SANKAR - AFP

Hunger pains on Slave Island as Sri Lanka's food prices rocket

His hair is neatly combed but his cheeks are sunken and veins visible on his gaunt frame: like many Sri Lankans, Milton Pereira and his family cannot afford to buy enough food.

Text size:

During the country's worst-ever economic crisis, which has driven rampant inflation and spurred protests that last week brought down the president, Sri Lankans are buying less, eating less and working less.

"It's very difficult to live, even a loaf of bread is expensive," Pereira told AFP outside his modest home in Slave Island, a poor enclave of the capital Colombo.

"If we take one meal, we skip another."

With six children in the family, the 74-year-old said the best they had been able to afford in recent weeks was the occasional fish, cut into small pieces for everyone.

"Because we don't have much money, sometimes we give the fish to the children," he said. The adults, he added, "only eat the gravy".

Triggered by the coronavirus pandemic, the country's financial woes were exacerbated by government mismanagement, critics say.

Peirera's son, B. G. Rajitkumar, is an electrical labourer who has had no work for months.

"Food prices go up every day," he said. "This exponential price rise is the most terrible thing I have ever faced."

Food inflation in Sri Lanka reached 80.1 percent in the year to June, according to official figures.

At a nearby vegetable store, residents pay 1,000 rupees ($2.80) for a kilo of gourd, twice as much as three months ago, and owner Mohamad Faizal said some of his customers were now buying as little as 100 grams a time.

"The prices have gone up," he said. "The main reason is there is no way to transport those items because there is no fuel."

- 'No option' -

With no foreign exchange reserves for imports and having defaulted on its $51 billion foreign debt, Sri Lanka is experiencing dire shortages of fuel, medicines and other essentials.

According to the World Food Programme, nearly five million people -- 22 percent of the population -- need food aid.

In its latest assessment, it said more than five out of every six families were either skipping meals, eating less or buying worse food.

While food is not in short supply, the issue is affordability.

The city's New Manning main wholesale vegetable market was bustling on Sunday as buyers, sellers and porters jostled with sacks of produce.

But traders say business has gone down by more than half since March.

"Prices for everything have more than doubled," said trader M. M. Mufeed. "Some unsold vegetables go to waste and many poor people come to take away some of it every day after the market closes."

His sales are down 70 percent, he added. "Sometimes I sell to poor people for much less to avoid wasting food and make up somewhat."

But potatoes, onions and garlic continue to be imported from India, Pakistan and China, said import-export bussinessman Ashley Jennycloss.

"Supply of food is not a problem, but because there is no fuel that makes it difficult and everything becomes expensive," said Jeeva, another trader, who gave only one name.

Some people travel long distances on foot to the New Manning market in the early morning to buy small amounts of vegetables for their kitchens at bulk rates.

"I have no option but to walk 10 kilometres to this market because food is cheaper here compared to retail stores near my home," said 50-year-old Howzy, who gave one name.

- Pumpkin patch -

The protest movement that brought down Rajapaksa has its headquarters outside his former office, where dozens of volunteers work in a patchwork of tents lining the seafront promenade.

Among them, former government employee Theodore Rajapakse -- no relation --is teaching people how to produce fast-growing vegetables in small patches of land near their homes.

"My country is in trouble," he said, adding that he has taught around 3,000 protesters since he joined the demonstrations.

"You can grow 100 kilos of pumpkin in a three-feet-by-three-feet patch of land," he added.

But the prospects of immediate improvement in Sri Lankans' plight are limited, and the most likely successor as president, former prime minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, is reviled by the protesters as a Rajapaksa ally.

At Slave Island -- an area named after a staging post the Portuguese used for slaves from Africa during the colonial period -- Pereira had little hope.

"Gota is gone, but there is no one candidate to lead us out of this terrible condition," he said.

"Politicians are divided. So it will get worse, what else can happen?"

M.Saito--JT