fbpx

Type to search

Sri Lanka Lifts Curfew Imposed After Protests Turn Violent

Protesters gathered near President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s residence in a Colombo suburb on Thursday and were broken up by police using tear gas and water cannons.


Sri Lanka curfew
A person takes a photo as a demonstrator walks near a bus that was set on fire at the top of the road to Sri Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa's residence during a protest against him as many parts of the crisis-hit country faced up to 13 hours without electricity due to a shortage of foreign currency to import fuel, in Colombo, Sri Lanka. Photo: Reuters.

 

Police in Sri Lanka’s commercial capital lifted a curfew on Friday after protests in which more than 50 people were arrested and several policemen hurt near the home of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa over his handling of an economic crisis.

Police had imposed an overnight curfew in several parts of Colombo after demonstrations against power cuts and other hardships turned violent, an official said.

Hundreds of protesters gathered near Rajapaksa’s private residence late on Thursday and were broken up by police using tear gas and water cannons, a witness said.

Amal Edirimanne, a senior superintendent of police, said a curfew had been imposed in four police divisions of Colombo.

Protesters, some clad in motorcycle helmets, dismantled a wall and hurled bricks at police, before setting a bus alight on a road leading to Rajapaksa’s home, the witness said.

“We have arrested 54 people over the unrest last night,” a police spokesman said. “Several vehicles belonging to the army and police were burnt by the protesters, including two buses, one police jeep and several motorcycles.”

The island of 22 million people is experiencing rolling blackouts for up to 13 hours a day because the government does not have enough foreign exchange for fuel imports.

The International Monetary Fund (IMF) will initiate discussions with Sri Lankan authorities on a possible loan programme in coming days, a spokesman said on Thursday, as the government looks for a way out of the crisis.

The government is turning off street lights to save electricity, power minister Pavithra Wanniarachchi told reporters, as a continuing shortage of diesel brought more power cuts and halted trading on the main stock market.

Retail Inflation Hits 18.7%

The power cuts add to the pain of Sri Lankans already dealing with shortages of essentials and rocketing prices. Retail inflation hit 18.7% in March over the same period a year ago, the statistics department said on Thursday.

Food inflation reached 30.2% in March, partly driven by a currency devaluation and last year’s ban on chemical fertilisers that was later reversed.

Inflation was at its worst level in a over a decade, Dimantha Mathew of First Capital Research said.

A diesel shipment under a $500 million credit line from India was expected on Saturday, Wanniarachchi said, though she added that would not fix the issue.

“Once that arrives we will be able to reduce load shedding hours but until we receive rains, probably some time in May, power cuts will have to continue,” she said. “There’s nothing else we can do.”

Water levels at reservoirs feeding hydroelectric projects had fallen to record lows, while demand had hit record highs during the hot, dry season, she said.

The Colombo Stock Exchange (CSE) cut daily trading to two hours from the usual four-and-a-half because of the power cuts for the rest of this week at the request of brokers, the bourse said in a statement.

But shares slid after the market opened on Thursday and the CSE halted trading for 30 minutes – the third time in two days – after an index tracking leading companies dropped by more than 5%.

The crisis is a result of badly-timed tax cuts and the impact of the Covid pandemic coupled with historically weak government finances, leading to foreign exchange reserves dropping by 70% over the last two years.

 

  • Reuters with additional editing by Sean OMeara

 

 

ALSO READ:

 

Sri Lanka Stock Market Chops Trading Hours Amid Power Cuts

 

Sri Lanka’s Economic Crisis Sees Food, Fuel in Short Supply

 

Sri Lanka Tweaks Trade Rules to Ramp Up Forex Reserves

 

 

 

Sean O'Meara

Sean O'Meara is an Editor at Asia Financial. He has been a newspaper man for more than 30 years, working at local, regional and national titles in the UK as a writer, sub-editor, page designer and print editor. A football, cricket and rugby fan, he has a particular interest in sports finance.

logo

AF China Bond