Electricity bill hike adds to misery of Sri Lankans amid crisis
The 66 percent price increase is the latest measure by the island nation to clinch a $2.9bn IMF loan to tackle the economic crisis.
The latest electricity price rise in crisis-hit Sri Lanka has left stall owner Mohammed Lafeel in a quandary: the 66 percent increase means he can’t afford to pay for electricity but can’t manage without it so goes deeper into debt to keep it on. Over the last month, with inflation hovering at 55 percent year-on-year, Lafeel says his income has fallen by about a third as fewer customers buy his knick-knacks as more of them struggle under the island’s worst financial crisis in 70 years. Lafeel says he does not know how he can repay the 300,000 rupees ($835) he borrowed for his daughter’s wedding and has had to borrow more to reconnect the power at home after it was cut off because he hadn’t paid the bill. “Everyone is under pressure,” Lafeel told Reuters news agency at his stall next to the main railway station in the city of Colombo, days after the second power price increase since a 75 percent rise in August. “But how can we manage without power?”