The Hamilton Spectator

Sri Lanka police fire tear gas at election protest; 15 hurt

- KRISHAN FRANCIS

Police in Sri Lanka on Sunday fired tear gas and water cannons to disperse protesters angry over a decision to postpone local elections after the government said it cannot finance them because of the country’s crippling economic crisis.

About 15 people were treated for minor injuries, according to Colombo National Hospital.

Thousands of supporters of the opposition National People’s Power party tried to march toward the main business district in capital Colombo, ignoring police warnings after a court order barred them from entering the area, which includes the president’s residence, office and key government buildings.

The order had been obtained in the backdrop of last July’s massive protests, when thousands of people stormed the presidenti­al office and residence and occupied them for days. The crisis forced then-president Gotabaya Rajapaksa to flee the country and resign.

The turmoil was caused by severe shortages of some foods, fuel, cooking gas and medicine, after Sri Lanka went bankrupt because it could not repay its foreign debt. The new president, Ranil Wickremesi­nghe, negotiated a rescue package with the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund for $2.9 billion (U.S.) over four years, but it can be finalized only if Sri Lanka’s creditors give assurances on debt restructur­ing.

Sri Lanka’s total foreign debt exceeds $51 billion, of which it must repay $28 billion by 2027. India and several other creditor countries have so far given assurances that meet the IMF standards, but the deal hinges on whether China would agree to debt restructur­ing at the same level.

The Finance Ministry under Wickremesi­nghe said it can’t allocate sufficient funds for the March 9 elections for town and village councils, even though political parties had submitted nomination­s.

The decision forced the Election Commission to indefinite­ly postpone the elections.

Despite signs of progress in reducing shortages and ending daily power cuts, Wickremesi­nghe is immensely unpopular. Many people say he lacks the mandate because he was elected by lawmakers backed by Rajapaksa supporters.

 ?? ERANGA JAYAWARDEN­A THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Members of Sri Lankan opposition political party National People’s Power shout antigovern­ment slogans as police use water canons to disperse them during a clash in Colombo,
Sri Lanka on Sunday.
ERANGA JAYAWARDEN­A THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Members of Sri Lankan opposition political party National People’s Power shout antigovern­ment slogans as police use water canons to disperse them during a clash in Colombo, Sri Lanka on Sunday.

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