Hindustan Times (Amritsar)

Dozens arrested in Sri Lanka after economy protests turn violent

- Associated Press

COLOMBO: Dozens of people were arrested in Sri Lanka following protests near the president’s home demanding that he resign amid the country’s worst economic crisis in memory, police said Friday.

President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s office blamed “organized extremists” within the group of protesters for violence during Thursday night’s demonstrat­ion, where police fired tear gas and a water cannon at thousands of protesters and arrested 54 people. Dozens of other people were also injured.

Nuwan Bopage, an attorney representi­ng some of the suspects, said several of them were being taken for medical examinatio­ns for various injuries and would likely appear in court later Friday.

The protesters blame Rajapaksa for long power outages and shortages of essentials. A police curfew that was implemente­d in the suburbs of the capital was lifted Friday morning.

Sri Lanka has huge debt obligation­s and dwindling foreign reserves, and its struggle to pay for imports has caused the shortages. People wait in long lines for fuel, and power is cut for several hours daily because there’s not enough fuel to operate generating plants and dry weather has sapped hydropower capacity.

On Thursday, the crowds demonstrat­ing along the roads leading to Rajapaksa’s private residence on the outskirts of Colombo stoned two army buses that police were using to block the protesters from entering the road leading to the president’s house. They set fire to one of the buses and turned back a fire truck that rushed to douse it.

Senior police spokesman Ajith Rohana told media that 42 police personnel and several other civilians were injured in the unrest, and several vehicles belonging to the police and army were torched by protesters.

Sri Lanka’s economic woes are blamed on successive government­s not diversifyi­ng exports and relying on traditiona­l cash sources like tea, garments and tourism, and on a culture of consuming imported goods.

The Covid-19 pandemic dealt a heavy blow to Sri Lanka’s economy, with the government estimating a loss of $14 billion in the last two years.

Sri Lanka also has immense foreign debt after borrowing heavily on projects that don’t earn money. Its foreign debt repayment obligation­s are around $7 billion for this year alone.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from India