India announced $450m relief package for Sri Lanka Cyclone Ditwah victims

By Anjali Sharma
WASHINGTON – External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar on Tuesday announced India’s decision to offer a reconstruction package of USD 450 million to Sri Lanka post ‘Cyclone Ditwah’, according to External Affairs ministry in a statement released.

Jaishankar met with his Sri Lankan counterpart Vijitha Herath in Colombo, visiting as Special Envoy of Prime Minister Narendra Modi, said he had this morning met Sri Lankan President Anura Kumara Disanayaka to personally deliver a letter from Mr. Modi.

“We had a detailed discussion on the damage caused by Cyclone Ditwah. The letter from Prime Minister Modi that I handed over builds on our First Responder role and commits a reconstruction package of $450 million to Sri Lanka. Our talks centred on how expeditiously this commitment can be delivered,’’ he added.

Jaishankar said the assistance package that India has proposed will include USD 350 million in concessional Lines of Credit and USD 100 million in grants.

“Our assistance will cover sectors worst affected by the cyclone, including: rehabilitation and restoration of road, railway and bridge connectivity; support for construction of houses fully destroyed and partially damaged; support for health and education systems, in particular, those that have been damaged by the cyclone; agriculture, including to address possible shortages in the short and medium term and working towards better disaster response and preparedness,’’ he added.

The package is being finalized in close consultations with the Government of Sri Lanka, he added.

He said India is conscious that work towards mitigating the impact of ”Cyclone Ditwah” on the people of Sri Lanka must be done in the quickest time possible.

“We are discussing an effective coordination mechanism for the earliest possible delivery,’’ he added.

He noted that Sri Lanka is a significant tourism economy, Jaishankar assured the Sri Lankan Foreign Minister that India will continue to encourage tourism traffic from the country in that regard. Similarly, an increase in Foreign Direct Investment from India can also boost Sri Lanka’s economy at a critical time.

Jaishankar recalled that India’s relief and assistance mission – Operation Sagar Bandhu commenced on the very day that Cyclone Ditwah made landfall.

He added that as Sri Lanka’s closest neighbor and in line with India’s ‘’Neighborhood First’’ and ‘’MAHASAGAR’ policies, it was only natural that India step forward at a time when Sri Lanka faced a crisis.