than usual, though nhs leaders are concerned about a possible sharp rise tomorrow. hugh pym, bbc news. to sri lanka next, where the government is planning big spending cuts, saying that it has barely enough money to pay salaries and pension of public servants. the international monetary fund has agreed a bail out loan of nearly three billion dollars, but it wants sri lanka to raise taxes and cut public services. ben chu reports. cheering six months ago in sri lanka, amid sovereign debt default and economic chaos, there was a revolution. a new president has since been installed. an international monetary fund bailout has been agreed. but half a year on, are the lives of ordinary sri lankans actually any better?
him recently. triggers coming in from all corners in response to that news. the sri lankan government is planning big spending cuts, saying it barely has enough money to pay salaries and pensions of public servants. all government departments have been ordered to make a 5% reduction in spending. that is right across the board. the international monetary fund has agreed a bailout loan of nearly $3 billion, but it wants sri lanka to raise taxes and cut public services. ben chu reports. cheering six months ago in sri lanka, amid sovereign debt default and economic chaos, there was a revolution. a new president has since been installed. an international monetary fund bailout has been agreed. but half a year on, are the lives of ordinary
she last appeared on the catwalk in february 2019, at milan fashion week. i m proud of my wrinkles, she wrote. i worked for each one. growing older is beautiful. tatjana patitz died in california. gail maclellan, bbc news. the sri lankan government is planning big spending cuts, saying it barely has enough money to pay salaries and pensions of public servants. all government departments have been ordered to make a 5% reduction in spending. the international monetary fund has agreed a bail out loan of nearly $3 dollars, but it wants sri lanka to raise taxes and cut public services. ben chu reports. cheering six months ago in sri lanka, amid sovereign debt default and economic chaos,
to sri lanka next, where the government is planning big spending cuts, saying that it has barely enough money to pay salaries and pension of public servants. all government departments have been ordered to make a 5% reduction in spending. the international monetary fund has agreed a bail out loan of nearly $3 billion but it wants sri lanka to raise taxes and cut public services. ben chu reports. six months ago in sri lanka, amid sovereign debt default and economic chaos, there was a revolution. a new president has since been installed. an international monetary fund bailout has been agreed. but half a year on, are the lives of ordinary sri lankans actually any better?