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Lazard is in talks about Sri Lanka’s debt with China, India, and Japan.

A spokesman for the Sri Lankan government said on Tuesday that the financial advisory firm Lazard (NYSE:LAZ) has begun talks with India, China, and Japan about restructuring Sri Lanka’s debt. This comes as the island country, which is in a financial crisis, looks to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) for help.

Sri Lanka hired Lazard and the international law firm Clifford Chance in May to help the government restructure its debt, which is estimated to be anywhere from $85 billion to well over $100 billion.

The IMF said earlier this month that it had reached a preliminary agreement with Sri Lanka for a loan of about $2.9 billion. But for the deal to go through, the country’s three biggest international lenders—China, India, and Japan—will have to forgive some of its debt.

Related: Sri Lanka’s president and premier resign over the economy.

“They are in the process of talking to India, China, and Japan,” acting Cabinet spokesperson Ramesh Pathirana said about Lazard. “This is mostly to make sure we come to some kind of agreement.”

“We’ll keep our fingers crossed that we can agree on something.”

Sri Lanka owes about $13 billion to these three countries, but China is Sri Lanka’s biggest bilateral creditor.

A government source told Reuters that Sri Lanka is also likely to reach out to private creditors later this week. These creditors hold about $12 billion in bonds.

“The government plans to start talking about debt restructuring with the ambassadors of China, the U.S., Japan, and India next week,” a source said, declining to give his name because he was not allowed to talk to the media.

Sri Lanka is in the middle of its worst financial crisis in 70 years, which has left it with only a small amount of foreign currency to pay for imports of fuel, food, and medicine.

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