<p>Sri Lanka's election body on Tuesday said the local body polls scheduled to be held on April 25 have now been postponed indefinitely due to an acute shortage of funds.</p>.<p>The Election Commission made the announcement a day after its officials held meetings with Prime Minister Dinesh Gunawardena and members of major political parties.</p>.<p>The Election Commission’s director general Saman Sri Ratnayake said that the next date for holding elections would be announced only after the Treasury confirms the disbursal of funds.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/sri-lankas-president-assures-justice-for-2019-easter-sunday-blast-victims-1207983.html" target="_blank">Sri Lanka's President assures justice for 2019 Easter Sunday blast victims</a></strong></p>.<p>The local body polls, which were earlier scheduled on March 9, got postponed to April 25, due to a plethora of reasons linked to Sri Lanka’s current economic crisis.</p>.<p>Last month, the Election Commission postponed the postal voting for the local body polls due to the paucity of funds.</p>.<p>In March, the Sri Lankan government's printer Gangani Liyanage said the inability to print ballot papers to conduct postal voting from February 21 to 24 caused the Election Commission to postpone the elections.</p>.<p>Liyanage said that by the time the elections were postponed, she had only received Rs 40 million out of the estimated full cost of Rs 500 million from the Treasury.</p>.<p>The election to appoint new administrations to 340 local councils for a four-year term was postponed since March last year due to the ongoing economic crisis.</p>.<p>The International Monetary Fund has approved a $3 billion bailout programme to help debt-ridden Sri Lanka overcome its economic crisis and catalyse financial support from other development partners, a move welcomed by Colombo as a "historic milestone" in the critical period.</p>.<p>Sri Lanka was hit by an unprecedented financial crisis in 2022, the worst since its independence from Britain in 1948, due to a severe paucity of foreign exchange reserves, sparking a major political and humanitarian crisis in the island nation.</p>
<p>Sri Lanka's election body on Tuesday said the local body polls scheduled to be held on April 25 have now been postponed indefinitely due to an acute shortage of funds.</p>.<p>The Election Commission made the announcement a day after its officials held meetings with Prime Minister Dinesh Gunawardena and members of major political parties.</p>.<p>The Election Commission’s director general Saman Sri Ratnayake said that the next date for holding elections would be announced only after the Treasury confirms the disbursal of funds.</p>.<p><strong>Also Read | <a href="https://www.deccanherald.com/international/sri-lankas-president-assures-justice-for-2019-easter-sunday-blast-victims-1207983.html" target="_blank">Sri Lanka's President assures justice for 2019 Easter Sunday blast victims</a></strong></p>.<p>The local body polls, which were earlier scheduled on March 9, got postponed to April 25, due to a plethora of reasons linked to Sri Lanka’s current economic crisis.</p>.<p>Last month, the Election Commission postponed the postal voting for the local body polls due to the paucity of funds.</p>.<p>In March, the Sri Lankan government's printer Gangani Liyanage said the inability to print ballot papers to conduct postal voting from February 21 to 24 caused the Election Commission to postpone the elections.</p>.<p>Liyanage said that by the time the elections were postponed, she had only received Rs 40 million out of the estimated full cost of Rs 500 million from the Treasury.</p>.<p>The election to appoint new administrations to 340 local councils for a four-year term was postponed since March last year due to the ongoing economic crisis.</p>.<p>The International Monetary Fund has approved a $3 billion bailout programme to help debt-ridden Sri Lanka overcome its economic crisis and catalyse financial support from other development partners, a move welcomed by Colombo as a "historic milestone" in the critical period.</p>.<p>Sri Lanka was hit by an unprecedented financial crisis in 2022, the worst since its independence from Britain in 1948, due to a severe paucity of foreign exchange reserves, sparking a major political and humanitarian crisis in the island nation.</p>