Gulf News

Curfew lifted for Buddhist festival in Sri Lanka

Curfew was imposed on May 9 after deadly riots forced Mahinda to quit as PM

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Anationwid­e curfew was fully lifted yesterday to allow Sri Lankans to celebrate the Buddhist festival of Vesak, while new Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe assembled a cabinet to resolve the island nation’s economic and political crisis.

The curfew was imposed on May 9 after deadly clashes that forced Mahinda Rajapaksa to resign as premier, leaving his brother, Gotabaya Rajapaksa, to rule on as president.

Many public and private buildings were flying the multi-coloured Buddhist flag, while residents visited temples dressed in all-white for Sunday’s festival, which commemorat­es the birth, enlightenm­ent, and death of the Buddha.

More than a month of predominan­tly peaceful antigovern­ment protests turned violent at the beginning of last week when supporters of the former prime minister stormed a protest camp in Colombo, torching tents and beating protesters. The clashes, and reprisals against government figures, left 9 dead and more than 300 injured.

PM picks cabinet

New Prime Minister Wickremesi­nghe made his first cabinet appointmen­ts on Saturday.

As the only lawmaker from his United National Party in the country’s parliament, he is reliant on support from the Rajapaksas’ Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna to form a government. Saturday’s four cabinet appointmen­ts, who were all from the Rajapaksas’ party, have failed to satisfy protesters, who want the family removed from the nation’s politics.

Hit hard by the pandemic, rising oil prices and populist tax cuts by the Rajapaksa government, Sri Lanka is in the midst of its worst economic crisis since independen­ce in 1948, with rampant inflation and shortages of fuel and other essentials.

 ?? AP ?? An elderly woman waits outside a police station as she ■ demands cooking gas in Colombo, Sri Lanka, on Saturday.
AP An elderly woman waits outside a police station as she ■ demands cooking gas in Colombo, Sri Lanka, on Saturday.

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