Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Strike grips Sri Lanka as unions protest IMF bailout

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AFP: Sri Lanka deployed armed troops as trade unions crippled hospitals, ports and banks yesterday to protest against high income taxes imposed as a preconditi­on for a crucial Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF) bailout.

Schools cancelled term tests and outpatient department­s at hospitals closed due to the work stoppage that involved more than 40 trade unions. Fewer vehicles were seen on roads.

Dockers at the main sea port in Colombo stayed away while air traffic controller­s joined the combined industrial action to carry out “go slow” for two hours affecting at least 14 internatio­nal flights.

“All considered, our work-to-rule was for two hours but we will consider a full-blown strike if the government does not roll back the new tax rates,” Air Traffic Controller­s’ Associatio­n Secretary Rajitha Seneviratn­e told AFP.

Armed soldiers were deployed at railway stations as well as the port as the government attempted to restore minimum services. Dock workers had a tense standoff with the military inside the port but there were no reports of clashes.

President Ranil Wickremesi­nghe’s office said 20 trains operated to bring office workers to the capital but unions said it was less than five percent of the daily services.

State-run buses were also operating, the president’s office said but only a few of them were seen on the roads while attendance in schools, offices and factories had dropped sharply yesterday.

The strike came despite a ban imposed by Wickremesi­nghe last month and warnings that violators could lose their jobs.

Trade union spokesman Haritha Aluthge said talks with the authoritie­s overnight ended inconclusi­vely forcing them to go ahead with yesterday’s work stoppage.

Profession­als have also joined the trade unions in protesting against the sharp increase in income taxes since January.“anyone who violates the essential services order will face the full force of the law,” Cabinet spokesman Bandula Gunawardan­a had warned ahead of the nationwide action.

Unions say the strike duration will depend on the government’s response to their demand to reverse the new taxes, which were among the measures taken to qualify for a US $ 2.9 billion rescue package from the IMF.

The Washington-based lender’s executive board is due to decide on Sri Lanka on March 20 and is widely expected to release the first instalment of a nine-tranche US $ 2.9 billion loan spread over four years.

Officials involved in the negotiatio­ns said the IMF was closely monitoring the protests and social unrest since the tax reforms.“sri Lanka is one of the countries with the lowest tax revenues in the world. Unless state revenue is increased, there is no solution to the country’s economic crisis,” a Sri Lankan official told AFP.

Sri Lanka formally sought the IMF help on March 18 last year after defaulting on its US $ 46 billion foreign government debt in mid-april.

Colombo received assurances last week from Beijing, its largest single bilateral creditor, that it was willing to restructur­e its loans to the South Asian nation and clear the final hurdle for the IMF rescue.

In an open letter to Sri Lanka’s creditors, Wickremesi­nghe on Tuesday night stressed that all creditors would be treated equally following concerns that China may get a better deal.

“We reiterate our commitment to a comparable treatment of all our external creditors, with a view to ensuring all-round equitable burden sharing for all restructur­ed debts,” he said.

Sri Lanka’s unpreceden­ted economic crisis since late 2021 has caused severe shortages of food, fuel and medicines. It led to months of protests that toppled president Gotabaya Rajapaksa in July last year.

 ?? ?? Commuters travel on an overcrowde­d train during a nationwide strike which has hit transport services and hospitals (AFP Photo)
Commuters travel on an overcrowde­d train during a nationwide strike which has hit transport services and hospitals (AFP Photo)

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