Officials in Sri Lanka claimed Saturday that exams for millions of pupils were cancelled because the country ran out of printing paper and Colombo was short on funds to finance imports.
The term tests, scheduled for a week from Monday, have been
postponed indefinitely, according to education officials, due to a severe paper
scarcity as Sri Lanka grapples with its greatest financial crisis since
independence in 1948.
"School principals are unable to hold the tests because
printers are unable to get foreign exchange to import essential paper and
ink," according to the Western Province Department of Education.
According to official sources, the action could effectively
put two-thirds of the country's 4.5 million students' exams on hold.
Term assessments are part of a year-long evaluation process
that determines whether pupils will be promoted to the next grade level.
The country is running out of food, fuel, and
pharmaceuticals due to a crippling economic crisis caused on by a lack of
foreign exchange reserves to finance crucial imports.
The cash-strapped 22-million-strong South Asian country
declared this week that it will seek IMF assistance to fix its rising foreign
debt crisis and shore up its external reserves.
President Gotabaya Rajapaksa's surprising Wednesday request
to negotiate a bailout was confirmed by the International Monetary Fund on
Friday.
Colombo's debt is due to be serviced in the amount of $6.9
billion this year, while its foreign currency reserves were at $2.3 billion at
the end of February.
Long lines have formed for groceries and oil around the
country, as the government has implemented rolling blackouts and rationing of
milk powder, sugar, lentils, and rice.
Sri Lanka approached China, one of its biggest creditors,
for assistance in deferring debt payments early this year, but Beijing has yet
to respond.


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