Sri Lanka asks government employees to work from home amid fuel shortages

A man sleeps on a folding bed on a pavement as he waits in queue to buy petrol due to fuel shortage, amid the country’s economic crisis, in Colombo, Sri Lanka on Friday. (Reuters)
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Updated 17 June 2022
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Sri Lanka asks government employees to work from home amid fuel shortages

  • Sri Lanka is scrambling to find foreign exchange to pay for desperately needed fuel imports
  • Those providing essential services like healthcare will continue to report for duty at their offices

COLOMBO: Sri Lanka’s government on Friday ordered public sector employees to work from home for two weeks due to severe fuel shortages as the island nation grapples with its worst financial turmoil in seven decades.
Sri Lanka is scrambling to find foreign exchange to pay for desperately needed fuel imports, and its existing stock of petrol and diesel is projected to run out in a matter of days.
A combination of government mismanagement and the COVID-19 pandemic has pushed the country of 22 million people into its deepest economic crisis since independence from Britain in 1948.
“Taking into consideration the severe limits on fuel supply, the weak public transport system and the difficulty in using private vehicles this circular allows minimal staff to report to work from Monday,” the Public Administration and Home Affairs Ministry said on Friday.
Of its approximately one million government employees, those providing essential services like health care will continue to report for duty at their offices, the circular said.
Earlier this week, the government also approved a four-day work week for public sector workers to help them cope with a chronic fuel shortage and encourage them to grow food.
Snaking lines of vehicles stretching several kilometers have formed at many gas stations countrywide this week, leaving some people waiting for more than 10 hours for fuel.
The country is in talks with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for a bailout package with a delegation expected in Colombo on Monday.
The United Nations has outlined a plan to raise $47 million to provide assistance to 1.7 million Sri Lankans worst hit by the crisis over the next four months.
As many as 5 million Sri Lankans could be directly impacted by food shortages in the coming months, Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe’s office said in a statement on Friday.


Recovery of New Zealand landslide victims halted on safety concerns

Updated 25 January 2026
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Recovery of New Zealand landslide victims halted on safety concerns

  • Six people, including two teenagers, are presumed dead after heavy rains triggered Thursday’s landslide at Mount Maunganui
  • Authorities have been working to identify the victims after human remains were found at the site on Saturday

SYDNEY: New Zealand authorities suspended recovery efforts on Sunday for victims of a landslide that hit a busy campground on the country’s North Island.
Six people, including two teenagers, are presumed dead after heavy rains triggered Thursday’s landslide at Mount Maunganui on the island’s east coast, bringing down soil and rubble at the site in ‌the city ‌of Tauranga, crowded ‌with ⁠families on ‌summer holidays.
Authorities have been working to identify the victims after human remains were found at the site on Saturday.
But a crack found at the site prompted recovery work to cease for the day ⁠on Sunday, said police Superintendent Tim Anderson.
“As a result ‌of that, we’ve had ‍to pull ‍all our staff out,” Anderson told reporters ‍at Mount Maunganui, adding, “We’ve had to do that for the safety of everyone concerned.”
He did not specify when work would resume, saying the authorities were taking it “day by day at the moment.”
Prime ⁠Minister Christopher Luxon said on Saturday it was “devastating to receive the news we have all been dreading,” after the rescue operation shifted to recovery.
“To the families who have lost loved ones — every New Zealander is grieving with you,” Luxon posted on X.
The heavy rain this week unleashed another landslide ‌in the neighboring suburb of Papamoa, killing two.