New Straits Times

SRI LANKANS FLEE CAPITAL

People buy essentials, return to hometowns as govt lifts curfew in Colombo for a few hours

- COLOMBO

MANY Sri Lankans thronged buses in the main city here yesterday to return to their hometowns, with leaders of political parties due to meet after the prime minister quit and went into hiding and President Gotabaya Rajapaksa warned of anarchy.

The island nation off India’s southern tip, which overlooks shipping routes between Europe and Asia, is battling its worst economic crisis since independen­ce.

Violence erupted on Monday after supporters of former prime minister Mahinda

Rajapaksa, the president’s elder brother, attacked an anti-government protest camp here. Days of violent reprisals against government figures aligned to the powerful Rajapaksa clan followed.

The army was called out to patrol the streets. Police said nine people were killed and more than 300 hurt in the clashes.

Hundreds of people thronged the main bus station in the commercial capital here after authoritie­s lifted an indefinite curfew at 7am yesterday. The curfew will be reimposed at 2pm.

Streets here were quiet, with some people venturing out to buy essential supplies. Frustratio­n remained at fuel shortages that have crippled the country’s economy.

“We have hit the bottom economical­ly,” said Nimal Jayantha, an autoricksh­aw driver queuing for petrol after the curfew was lifted. “I don’t have the time do my job. By the time I stay in the fuel queue and get petrol, curfew will be imposed. I will have to go home without any money.”

Protesters sprayed graffiti over Mahinda’s home in a southern town and ransacked a museum dedicated to his father. They vowed to keep up the protests until the president also quits.

Mahinda stepped down after the fighting erupted and is in hiding in a military base in the northeast of the country.

His brother said on Wednesday he would appoint a new prime minister and cabinet this week “to prevent the country from falling into anarchy as well as to maintain the affairs of the government that have been halted”.

Sri Lanka’s central bank governor said on Wednesday failing to find a solution to the crisis in the next one to two weeks would lead to power cuts of up to 10 to 12 hours a day, as well as his own resignatio­n.

Yesterday, leaders of political parties were set to meet the speaker of the Parliament to discuss the current situation.

President Rajapaksa has repeatedly called for a unity government to find a way out of the crisis, but opposition leaders say they will not serve until he resigns.

Hit hard by the pandemic, rising oil prices and tax cuts by the populist Rajapaksa government, the island nation is experienci­ng its worst financial crisis since independen­ce in 1948.

Useable foreign reserves stand as low as US$50 million, inflation is rampant, and shortages of fuel, medicine and other essential goods have brought thousands onto the streets in more than a month of antigovern­ment protests, that had remained mostly peaceful until Monday.

 ?? AFP PIC ?? People buying vegetables at a market after authoritie­s relaxed the curfew for a few hours in Colombo yesterday.
AFP PIC People buying vegetables at a market after authoritie­s relaxed the curfew for a few hours in Colombo yesterday.

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