Textbooks for 4 million students bought by Sri Lanka using part of Indian aid

Colombo: The Indian High Commission in Colombo announced on Saturday that Sri Lanka had used more than $10 million of the USD 1 billion in assistance from India to print nearly half of the textbooks for its four million young pupils.

As part of its financial assistance to help Sri Lanka cope with its economic crisis, India announced a USD 1 billion line of credit to the nation last year.

After an agreement to extend the line of credit was inked, Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) Spokesperson Arindam Bagchi said India has always stood with the people of Sri Lanka and will continue to extend all possible support to the country.

“A concessional credit facility of USD 1 billion was extended to the Government of Sri Lanka by the Government of India in March 2022 for supply of essential items including food, fuel, medicines, industrial raw materials. Out of this facility, over USD 10 million has been used by SPC and private importers to procure printing paper and material from India,” the High Commission said.

“This is being used to print 45 per cent of textbooks required by 4 million young students of Sri Lanka for the academic year 2023,” it said in a statement.

India and Sri Lanka enjoy a multi-faceted and multi-sectoral partnership. In line with its 'Neighbourhood First' policy, India's assistance to the people of Sri Lanka is extended in various forms, including through concessional credit facilities and lines of credit.

“Till date, lines of credit worth over USD 4 billion have been extended to Sri Lanka in diverse sectors including supply of essential items, petroleum, fertilisers, development of railways, infrastructure, defence sector and renewable energy,” the statement said.

Sri Lanka was hit by an unprecedented financial crisis in 2022 that also sparked political turmoil in the island nation which led to the ouster of the all-powerful Rajapaksa family for now.

The Sri Lankan government in May declared a debt default on over USD 51 billion in foreign loans – a first in the country's history.

Extending a much-needed lifeline to a neighbour in need, India gave financial assistance of nearly USD 4 billion to Colombo during the year.


With PTI inputs 

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