Muscat Daily

Sri Lanka economy on brink of collapse as troops quell unrest

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Colombo, Sri Lanka – Sri Lanka's economy will "collapse" unless a new government is urgently appointed, the central bank chief warned Wednesday, as security forces fanned out on the streets to restore order after spasms of mob violence.

Police say nine people have died since Monday, when frustratio­n at a dire economic crisis erupted into clashes between backers and opponents of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, injuring more than 200.

Opposition parties have refused Rajapaksa's overtures for a unity government to resolve a political deadlock and instead demanded his resignatio­n.

Central Bank Governor Nandalal Weerasingh­e said it was critical that a new administra­tion take charge by Friday or the country would suffer a catastroph­e. "The economy will completely collapse and no one will be able to save it," he told reporters.

"The country was fast going down a slope when I took over just over a month ago. I thought we were able to apply the brakes, but with events of Monday the brakes no longer work."

Shortly after taking over as the bank's chief in April, Weerasingh­e announced a default on Sri Lanka's US$51bn external debt, saying the country had no money to pay its creditors.

He said political stability was vital to implement the reforms needed to address Sri Lanka's snowballin­g debt crisis and the acute shortage of foreign exchange to import essentials.

Security forces have largely curbed public disorder after they were deployed to enforce a nationwide curfew with orders to "shoot on sight" anyone engaged in looting or violence.

"If the situation is not brought under control, there could be total anarchy," a senior security official told AFP on condition of anonymity.

The capital Colombo was almost deserted on Wednesday aside from soldiers manning checkpoint­s, near the charred remains of buses that had been set alight by anti-government crowds.

A small crowd continued to defy the curfew near the president's seafront office, where a protest camp has for the past month maintained a vigil calling on him to step down.

"We want the whole Rajapaksa clan out because they are so, so corrupt. They have been eating into Sri Lanka like a caterpilla­r eating into some fruit," activist Kaushalya Fernando told AFP.

Turning point

Sri Lankans have been suffering shortages of essential goods, fuel and medicines for months in the island's worst economic downturn since independen­ce in 1948.

The crisis moved into a darker phase on Monday when government supporters with sticks and clubs attacked demonstrat­ors who had been protesting peacefully for weeks demanding the president's resignatio­n.

Mobs then retaliated across the country, torching dozens of homes of ruling-party politician­s.

Mahinda Rajapaksa had to be rescued in a pre-dawn military operation on Tuesday and taken to a naval dockyard for safety after protesters tried to storm his official residence.

With vital tourism revenues torpedoed by the pandemic, Sri Lanka last month defaulted on its foreign debt, some of it stemming from Rajapaksa vanity projects built with Chinese loans.

The Internatio­nal Monetary Fund this week began a "virtual mission" of staff-level talks on a possible bailout.

IMF mission chief Masahiro Nozaki said the lender aimed to be "fully prepared for policy discussion­s once a new government has been formed".

 ?? (AFP) ?? Anti-government demonstrat­ors take part in a protest near the President's office in Colombo on Tuesday
(AFP) Anti-government demonstrat­ors take part in a protest near the President's office in Colombo on Tuesday

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