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Sri Lanka Economic Crisis Live Updates: Anticipating protests, authorities close Colombo’s Galle Face Green park; Oppn to move no-confidence motion against govt

Sri Lanka Crisis Live News, 8 April 2022: Central bank doubles interest rates to tame inflation as crisis bites; business leaders demand end to political impasse

By: Express Web Desk | New Delhi |
Updated: April 9, 2022 10:55:25 am
A man shouts slogans during a protest in front of the Temple Trees Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa's official residence in Colombo, Sri Lanka, April 7, 2022. (Reuters)

Sri Lanka Crisis Live News Updates: Authorities on Saturday closed Colombo’s Galle Face Green urban park, anticipating widespread protests in the area. Protestors were seen gathering outside the park early on Saturday morning, The Indian Express reported.

Meanwhile, Sri Lanka’s main Opposition party Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) on Friday announced that it will move a no-confidence motion against the government of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and is prepared to impeach the embattled leader if he fails to address the concerns of the public facing hardships due to the worst economic crisis. As protests continued across the country, demanding resignation of the President and the entire Rajapaksa family from the government, Opposition leader Sajith Premadasa also called for the Executive Presidency to be abolished, saying power should be divided between the Executive, Legislature and Judiciary.

In other news, Sri Lanka’s central bank doubled its key interest rates on Friday, raising each by an unprecedented 700 basis points to tame inflation that has soared due to crippling shortages of basic goods driven by a devastating economic crisis. The heavily indebted country has little money left to pay for imports, meaning fuel, power, food and, increasingly, medicine are in short supply. Street protests have been held nearly non-stop for more than a month, despite a five-day state of emergency and a two-day curfew..

Live Blog

Sri Lanka Crisis News: India ready to continue support to Sri Lanka, says MEA; Tamil Nadu CM MK Stalin seeks nod to send drugs, rice; Amid shortages, doctors association warns of 'catastrophe'; Follow latest updates here

10:29 (IST)09 Apr 2022
Colombo: Authorities close Galle Face Green urban park anticipating protests

Authorities have closed Galle Face Green urban park in Colombo, anticipating a huge gathering of protestors here today. Meanwhile, protestors began lining up outside the park on Saturday morning. (National Editor, Strategic Affairs, Nirupama Subramanian reports from Colombo)

Galle Face Green is Colombo's main sea front. (Express Photo by Nirupama Subramanian)
Protestors sit on the stairs leading up to the park. (Express Photo by Nirupama Subramanian)
08:29 (IST)09 Apr 2022
To India from angry street: Thank you, help us, not our government

IN 2001, when the Sri Lankan economy registered negative growth of minus-1.4 per cent after a particularly bad phase in the war against Tamil Tigers, G L Peiris, then the finance minister, was asked what the fallout would be. He retorted: “When you are sleeping on a straw mat, you don’t fall off.”

Two decades on, Sri Lanka has fallen off the straw mat.

On Friday, protesters gathered across Colombo, chanting “Go, Gota, Go”. (Express Photo by Nirupama Subramanian)

With just a week to go for the Tamil and Sinhala new year on April 14 — usually a time when all of Sri Lanka makes a beeline to grocery stores to stock up for the nearly weeklong holiday — the stores and their shelves are empty, and the lines at fuel pumps are long.

Inside homes, the mood is despondent. On the streets, there is palpable anger against the family that the Sinhala Buddhist-majority had worshipped not so long ago for defeating the LTTE. Read more. 


22:10 (IST)08 Apr 2022
In pictures | Demonstrators, police face off in Colombo

Continuing their protests against Sri Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, amid the country's economic crisis, scores of citizens took to the streets in Colombo on Friday.

Demonstrators pulled down metal barriers as they tried to enter the main road towards the parliament during a protest against the President. Protestors also shouted slogans against Gotabaya Rajapaksa.

Meanwhile, police used water cannon on the demonstrators. Hundreds of police personnel were deployed near the parliament, anticipating huge protests.

(PICS: REUTERS/Dinuka Liyanawatte)

21:51 (IST)08 Apr 2022
Main Opposition party SJB to move no-confidence motion against govt; says ready to impeach Prez

Sri Lanka's main Opposition party SJB on Friday announced that it will move a no-confidence motion against the government of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and is prepared to impeach the embattled leader if he fails to address the concerns of the public facing hardships due to the worst economic crisis.

As protests continued across the country, demanding resignation of the President and the entire Rajapaksa family from the government, Opposition leader Sajith Premadasa also called for the Executive Presidency to be abolished, saying power should be divided between the Executive, Legislature and Judiciary.

"The government must pay heed to the public demand for the Rajapaksas to quit, if not we will bring a no confidence motion," the leader of the Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) told Parliament. (PTI)

20:01 (IST)08 Apr 2022
Sri Lanka in the midst of a food crisis

The Indian Express is in Sri Lanka to document what is possibly the worst economic crisis our south-eastern neighbour has seen in decades. Shelves of supermarkets are virtually empty because of food shortage with the nation’s 21 million residents now forced to pay triple for basics like rice, sugar, lentils, and milk powder.

18:14 (IST)08 Apr 2022
Sri Lanka doubles interest rates to tame inflation as crisis bites

Sri Lanka's central bank doubled its key interest rates on Friday, raising each by an unprecedented 700 basis points to tame inflation that has soared due to crippling shortages of basic goods driven by a devastating economic crisis.

The heavily indebted country has little money left to pay for imports, meaning fuel, power, food and, increasingly, medicine are in short supply. Street protests have been held nearly non-stop for more than a month, despite a five-day state of emergency and a two-day curfew.

The Central Bank of Sri Lanka's (CBSL) monetary board raised its standing lending facility to 14.50% and its standing deposit facility to 13.50%. (Reuters)

18:13 (IST)08 Apr 2022
Ali Sabry returns as Sri Lanka's Finance Minister

Sri Lanka's newly-appointed Finance Minister Ali Sabry, who resigned from the post within 24 hours of his appointment, returned to the position on Friday and would head the government's negotiating team at the IMF as the island nation struggles to combat the unprecedented shortage of foreign reserves.

Former Justice Minister Sabry told Parliament on Friday that he had resigned from the post to give way for someone more suitable to accept the post. However, since no one came forward to accept the post he decided to continue as the Finance Minister.

“I will remain as the Finance Minister to do the needful to save the economy,” Sabry told Parliament. President Gotabaya Rajapaksa had appointed Sabry as the Finance Minister on April 4 after sacking his younger brother Basil Rajapaksa, who was at the centre of anger within the ruling Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna coalition. (PTI)

17:50 (IST)08 Apr 2022
Sri Lanka's main Opposition party to move no-confidence motion against govt

Sri Lanka's main Opposition party SJB on Friday announced that it will move a no-confidence motion against the government of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa if it fails to take steps to address the concerns of the public facing hardships due to the worst economic crisis.

Opposition leader Sajith Premadasa also called for the Executive Presidency to be abolished, saying power should be divided between the Executive, Legislature and Judiciary.

“The government must pay heed to the public demand for the Rajapaksas to quit, if not we will bring a no confidence motion," the leader of the Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) told Parliament. (PTI)

15:35 (IST)08 Apr 2022
Sri Lanka business leaders demand end to political impasse

Sri Lankan business leaders on Friday called for an end to the country's political instability amid public demands for the president to resign over alleged economic mismanagement, warning that failure to do so would lead to economic catastrophe.

Leaders from 23 business associations representing export, import and logistics firms told reporters in the capital, Colombo, that they want lawmakers to ``act responsibly and resolutely to implement remedial solutions to halt and then reverse the rapidly deteriorating situation.'' The associations warned that their industries, which collectively earn around $16.7 billion annually through merchandise and service exports, would come to a standstill if the current situation continues.

The Indian Ocean island nation is experiencing its worst economic crisis in decades. (AP)

A Sri Lankan man leaves a fuel station after waiting hours to unsuccessfully buy kerosene oil in Colombo, Thursday (AP/Eranga Jayawardena)
Sri Lankans queue up to purchase kerosene oil near a fuel station in Colombo, Thursday (AP /Eranga Jayawardena)
15:12 (IST)08 Apr 2022
Crisis-hit Sri Lanka's finance minister says no alternative to debt restructuring

Sri Lanka's finance minister on Friday said that the crisis-hit country must urgently restructure its debt and seek external help, while the main opposition threatened a no-confidence motion and business leaders warned that exports could plummet.

The heavily indebted country has little money left to pay for imports, leading to crippling shortages of fuel, power, food and, increasingly, medicine. Street protests have been held nearly non-stop for more than a month, despite a five-day state of emergency and a two-day curfew.

"We cannot step away from repaying debt because the consequences are terrifying. There is no alternative, we must restructure our debt," Ali Sabry told parliament. A repayment of $1 billion is due in July. J.P. Morgan analysts estimate that Sri Lanka's gross debt servicing costs will amount to $7 billion this year in total. (Reuters)

14:59 (IST)08 Apr 2022
Sri Lankan shares extend losses; investors await cenbank meeting

Sri Lankan shares closed lower for a third consecutive session on Friday, hurt by losses in financials and consumer staples stocks, as investors awaited the central bank's monetary policy meeting outcome later in the day as the country grapples with the worst economic crisis in decades.

* The CSE All-Share index settled 1.39% lower at 8,135.25 points. For the week, the index fell 3.97%.

* The Central Bank of Sri Lanka is expected to raise key interest rates by as much as 400 basis points (bps) following a 100 bps rise in early March.

* The debt-laden country currently faces shortages of food, fuel and medicines and prolonged power cuts as it struggles to pay for imports of fuel and other goods due to a scarcity of foreign exchange. (Reuters)

14:38 (IST)08 Apr 2022
A history of Sri Lankan refugees in India

When 16 Sri Lankan Tamils came ashore in Tamil Nadu last month, they were following a long line of predecessors who had fled war and discrimination in Sri Lanka. This time, while the reasons were more economic than political, the challenges facing the new wave of refugees from the island nation are unlikely to be different.

They are certain to join the approximately 100,000 Sri Lankans living in refugee camps across India or if they’re very lucky, the 34,000 individuals residing outside of the camps. This new wave of migration is unlikely to ease up anytime soon, explains Dr C Valatheeswaran, a Senior Fellow at the International Institute of Migration and Development (IIMD), adding that while we won’t see refugees arriving in the same numbers as before, more are sure to come. 

Sri Lankan Tamils in India can widely be divided into those who reside in the camps and those who do not. The distinction, an expert notes, is contingent on their economic status at the point of arrival. The wealthy, educated refugees largely migrated to the cities and were soon indistinguishable from the local population. The poor, illiterate ones on the other hand, were forced to reside in camps, and according to Dasgupta “ segregated from the local population, barred from living or working amongst them”.  

Read about the history of Sri Lankan refugees in India, the state of the refugee camps, and the politics around them in this research piece by Mira Patel.

14:32 (IST)08 Apr 2022
Opposition calls for restructuring Sri Lanka's debt in Parliament

"The government needs to address the financial crisis and work to improve governance, or we will move a no-confidence motion against the government," Sajith Premadasa, the leader of Samagi Jana Balawegaya, said in parliament. 

"It is imperative that Sri Lanka must avoid a disorderly debt default. The government must work to suspend debt and appoint financial advisers to start off the process of restructuring debt," he said. 

Parliament proceedings were suspended twice in the morning after parliamentarians heckled each other, with two members temporarily removed from the chamber on the orders of the speaker. (Reuters)

14:12 (IST)08 Apr 2022
'President yet to accept Finance Minister's resignation'

A member of the ruling party in Sri Lanka has said that the President is yet to accept the resignation of the Finance Minister, Reuters reported.

Ali Sabry, who earlier held the Justice Ministry, had tendered his resignation just a day after his appointment stating that "fresh, proactive, and unconventional" steps were needed to tide over the financial crisis, including a new FM. He had replaced the President's brother Basil Rajapaksa. However, in his letter of resignation, Sabry said that he had no intention of taking up a post after resigning as the Minister of Justice following protests against the country. 

13:05 (IST)08 Apr 2022
Sri Lanka Opposition to move no-confidence motion if crisis unaddressed

The head of Sri Lanka's main Opposition party said on Friday it would move a no-confidence motion in Parliament against the government if it does not take measures to address the country's financial crisis and improve governance. 

Sajith Premadasa, chief of the Samagi Jana Balawegaya party, made the threat in Parliament. (Reuters)

12:27 (IST)08 Apr 2022
India, Sri Lanka have been in discussion over post-Covid recovery: India's High Commissioner to Sri Lanka

"When India suffered during Covid-19, there were prayers from Sri Lanka, and when Sri Lanka suffered due to Covid, India helped them with medicines and other essentials. We have been in close contact and discussions with the government of Sri Lanka for post-covid economic recovery," Gopal Baglay, India's High Commissioner to Sri Lanka said. 

"In view of these discussions, the focus has been on support for currency to currency swap, extending credit for fuel and food, energy security, and encouraging Indian investment in Sri Lanka," Baglay was quoted as saying by ANI.

He added that as the closest maritime neighbour, India's ties with Sri Lanka are a "confluence of thee factors: Vasudev Kutumbkam, Doctor of Sagar and Neighbourhood First."

11:16 (IST)08 Apr 2022
Sri Lankan crisis expected to worsen: Fuel pumps may go dry by April end, exports could plunge

Sri Lanka may run out of diesel by the end of this month amid the worsening crisis and shortages, as the $500 million line of credit extended by India for fuel purchase is exhausting fast, PTI has reported.

Meanwhile, tea, garment and other industry leaders quoted by Reuters have expressed fears that the country’s goods and services exports could plunge 20 to 30 per cent this year due to high freight charges and power cuts, potentially worsening an economic crisis.

10:47 (IST)08 Apr 2022
Family of four sail to Rameswaram coast from Sri Lanka amid ongoing crisis

A family of four, including two children, fleeing Sri Lanka amid the economic crisis followed by unrest landed at Dhanushkodi in Rameswaram on Friday morning, the police said. According to the cops, fishermen in the area alerted them after they spotted the family and their boat near the shore.

“They are being shifted to the Mandapam camp. Further steps will be decided after the state intelligence and central agencies complete their procedures,” an officer said. The family sailed to the shore in Tamil Nadu on a fibre boat. They had told the local officials that they had started sailing from the Jaffna coast in the north of Sri Lanka. Read more

The family of four had set sail from the Jaffna coast in the north of Sri Lanka. (Photo: Special Arrangement)
10:01 (IST)08 Apr 2022
'Sri Lanka got trapped in debt trap of China': Refugee at Tamil Nadu camp

Blaming China for the economic crisis in his country, a Sri Lankan refugee at the Mandapam Camp in Tamil Nadu told news agency ANI, "This situation could've been avoided if Sri Lanka had a good relationship with India. The main reason for this situation is China. Sri Lanka got trapped in the debt trap of China. We are definitely worried about our people living there."

Another refugee at the camp said, "Very concerned about our relatives. They're living without food and other essentials. There's no electricity to charge mobiles. We are unable to talk to them."

09:18 (IST)08 Apr 2022
Sri Lanka gets new Central Bank Governor, Treasury Secretary; hunt on for Finance Minister

President Office on Thursday announced Nandalal Weerasinghe was appointed as the Governor of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka, replacing Ajith Nivard Cabraal, who resigned earlier this week just seven months after taking charge in September 2021. 

K M M Siriwardena was appointed as the Secretary to the Treasury, replacing S R Attygalle.

Meanwhile, the hunt is on for a new Finance Minsiter, after Ali Sabry, who had replaced the President's brother Basil Rajapaksa, resigned just a day after his appointment. 

People leave after being informed by the manager of a Ceylon Petroleum Corporation fuel station that they are out of kerosene in Colombo. (Reuters)

Ready to ship rice, drugs to Sri Lanka, Tamil Nadu tells Centre

Tamil Nadu CM MK Stalin spoke over phone to External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar and expressed his deep concern over the plight of Tamils in Lanka, who have been hit hard by the never seen before economic crisis in their country, an official release said.

The chief minister told Jaishankar Tamil Nadu is ready to ship rice, pulses and life saving drugs from Thoothukudi port to Sri Lanka.

Stalin apprised Jaishankar that the proposed move is based on humanitarian grounds, considering the welfare of Tamils in the island nation, including Tamils of the Indian origin, popularly known as ‘Malayaga Tamizhargal.’ The assistance is for Tamils including those in Colombo and in the North and Eastern provinces.

Sri Lanka medical group warns of catastrophic shortages

Sri Lanka's national medical association warned Thursday that hospitals will be unable to provide even emergency services in coming weeks because of critical shortages of drugs and medical equipment caused by the country's economic crisis, leading to a catastrophic number of deaths if supplies aren't replenished.

The Sri Lanka Medical Association sent a letter to Rajapaksa on Thursday saying that hospitals have already decided to curtail services such as routine surgeries and limit the use of available medical materials to treatment of life-threatening illnesses.

 

Unless supplies are urgently replenished, “within a matter of weeks, if not days, emergency treatment will also not be possible. This will result in a catastrophic number of deaths," the letter said. -- AP

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