Hormuz Closed. Three Countries Are Already Breaking.
Restaurants closing in Manila. Petrol rationed in Colombo. Nepali migrants walking home. Three weeks after Hormuz closed, three countries are breaking.

A hotel owner in Doti, Nepal, told his cook there wasn't enough gas to keep the kitchen open. The cook — a seasonal migrant worker named Roshan Khadka — packed his bag and walked home across the Indian border. He's one of thousands.
Three weeks ago, Iran closed the Strait of Hormuz. The missiles and counter-strikes got the headlines. But 5,000 miles from the Persian Gulf, the war is now deciding what people eat.
Manila's ₱100-per-litre shock
Filipino diesel just crossed ₱100 per litre — up 59% since the war started on February 28. The Philippine peso hit a record low of 60.1 to the dollar on March 19. Panic buying emptied fuel stations before the government even announced rationing.
The Philippines ordered public officials to cut air conditioning and reduce travel. Schools warned parents that lunch services could be disrupted. Tourism inquiries in Thailand dropped from 30 a day to three.
None of this made the front page in New York or London.
Colombo's QR codes
Sri Lanka brought back fuel rationing on March 15 — the same QR code system it used during its 2022 economic collapse. Motorists get 15 litres a week. The government cut the entire country to a four-day work week to stretch reserves that officials say will last six weeks.
The U.S. Embassy in Colombo issued a formal advisory. Reuters reported the government scrambling to buy 36,000 metric tons of petrol and 37,000 tons of diesel for April delivery.
Sri Lanka isn't at war. It has no stake in the conflict. Oil just happens to account for a quarter of its imports, and most of it came through a strait that's now closed.
The cook who walked home
India imports 65% of its cooking gas through Hormuz. Three weeks in, the pipeline is dry. The Restaurant Association of India says a third of the country's half-million restaurants are running on fumes — cutting menus, cutting hours, or shutting entirely.
In Surat, migrant workers are leaving because the factories closed. In Nepal's Sudurpaschim province, Nepali workers who cooked in Indian hotels are crossing back because their employers can't get LPG cylinders. Bijaya BK told Radio Nepal he lost his job when the hotel ran out of gas.
India's rupee posted its biggest plunge in four years on Friday. The government is now directing refineries to prioritise household gas over commercial use, and hospitals get first priority.
The war-to-kitchen pipeline
Here's what makes this story different from a normal oil price spike. It's not just expensive — it's absent. Vessel traffic through Hormuz dropped from 90 ships a day to five. On March 13, zero ships passed through.
The Albis Perception Gap Index scored this story 4.88 out of 10 — not because coverage disagrees, but because coverage barely exists outside Hindi and Filipino media. The Gap Attention Index hit 6.23: over four billion people live in countries where this kitchen crisis is invisible.
A war's real reach isn't measured in missiles. It's measured in the restaurant that closed in Manila, the QR code at a petrol station in Colombo, and the cook who walked home to Nepal because there wasn't enough gas to boil rice.
Sources & Verification
Based on 5 sources from 4 regions
- Radio NepalSouth Asia
- The GuardianInternational
- RapplerAsia-Pacific
- ReutersInternational
- U.S. Embassy Sri LankaNorth America
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