Tag: emergency rule

  • Sri Lanka: Son of ex-PM says father is not going to flee nation after lethal clashes

    The son of Sri Lanka’s ex-prime minister Mahinda Rajapaksa stated on Tuesday that Rajapaksha is not going to flee the nation after violence erupted following his resignation.

    Sri Lanka’s ex-prime minister Mahinda Rajapaksa (AFP photograph)

    Sri Lanka’s Mahinda Rajapaksa — who resigned as prime minister after his supporters attacked anti-government protesters and sparked a day of violence — is not going to flee the nation, his son informed AFP on Tuesday.

    The 76-year-old heads a political clan whose maintain on energy has been shaken by months of blackouts and shortages within the island nation, which is struggling its worst financial disaster since independence in 1948.

    Mahinda needed to be evacuated by the army from his official residence on Monday night time after it was besieged by an offended crowd.

    But his son Namal, himself as soon as touted as a future nationwide chief, stated the Rajapaksa household had no plans to depart Sri Lanka regardless of weeks of protests demanding they relinquish energy.

    ALSO READ | Sri Lanka disaster: Colombo’s high cop attacked by mob

    “There are a lot of rumours that we are going to leave. We will not leave the country,” he stated, describing the surge of nationwide anger in opposition to his household as a “bad patch”.

    He added that Mahinda wouldn’t step down as a lawmaker and wished to play an lively function in selecting his successor.

    Mahinda was taken to an undisclosed location after protesters on Monday night time breached the compound fence at Temple Trees, his official residence within the capital Colombo.

    “My father is safe, he is at a safe location and he is communicating with the family,” stated Namal, who served because the nation’s sports activities minister till a cabinet shake-up final month.

    The Rajapaksa clan has dominated Sri Lanka’s politics for a lot of the previous 20 years.

    Mahinda’s youthful brother Gotabaya Rajapaksa stays in workplace as president, with intensive government powers and command over the safety forces.

    Weeks of overwhelmingly peaceable protests in opposition to the federal government’s mismanagement of the disaster turned violent on Monday when supporters of Mahinda have been bussed into the capital from the countryside and attacked demonstrators.

    ALSO READ | Sri Lanka ex-PM, household take shelter at naval base amid huge protests

  • Sri Lankan Prez appoints new cabinet of 17 ministers

    Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa grew to become the one member of the household to retain a cabinet place in his youthful brother Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s new cabinet of 17 ministers appointed on Monday, because the island nation was going through the worst financial disaster.

    Earlier this month, Sri Lanka’s complete cabinet — apart from President Gotabaya and his elder brother, Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa — resigned from their posts after hundreds of individuals defied a national state of emergency and curfew and joined road protests denouncing the federal government.

    The earlier cabinet needed to make manner for the president to type a unity cabinet with the Opposition members. The Opposition, nonetheless, declined the supply.

    ALSO READ | Sri Lankan delegation heads to US to hunt USD 4 bn bailout bundle from IMF

    Rajapaksa swore in a 17-member cabinet on Monday along with the three ministers he had earlier appointed.

    That meant no place for the oldest member of the household, Chamal Rajapaksa, Mahinda’s son Namal Rajapaksa, each of whom had been cabinet ministers, and his nephew, Shasheendra who was a state minister.

    The cabinet appointment got here because the island-wide protests continued to pressure the resignation of the president and his household for mishandling the financial system.

    Sri Lanka is going through its worst financial disaster since gaining independence from the UK in 1948. The financial disaster additionally triggered a political turmoil within the island nation with residents holding nationwide road protests for weeks over prolonged energy cuts and lack of gasoline, meals and different each day necessities and demanding the ouster of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa.

    ALSO READ | Sri Lankan financial disaster defined in 5 charts

    FUEL PRICE HIKE

    People continued to be in gasoline and fuel queues whereas the facility cuts which weren’t imposed throughout the weekend on account of the normal Sinhala and Tamil new 12 months returned on Monday.

    The state energy entity mentioned there might be 4 and a half-hour energy cuts on Monday.

    Adding to public woes is the Lanka Indian oil firm’s (LIOC) announcement of additional value hikes for petrol and diesel with impact from Sunday midnight.

    The LIOC raised gasoline costs for the fourth time since February.

    ALSO READ | Colombo Stock Exchange to stay shut for five days as Sri Lanka struggles to fight foreign exchange disaster

    A spokesman for the LIOC mentioned the value hike was crucial because of the depreciation of the Sri Lankan rupee.

    Sri Lanka rupees had fallen by over 60 per cent until March 7 when the versatile trade charge was introduced.

    The value of Octane 92 has been raised by over 10 per cent to a report excessive of 338 rupees per litre whereas diesel at 289 rupees per litre has seen a 35 per cent improve.

  • Pressure mounts on Sri Lanka chief to stop as disaster grows

    Thousands of Sri Lankans rallied within the nation’s essential enterprise district and Christian clergy marched within the capital to watch a day of protest on Saturday calling on the debt-ridden nation’s president to resign, as nervousness and anger over shortages simmered.

    Protesters carrying nationwide flags and placards, some bemoaning the hardships by means of songs, blamed President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and his administration for mismanaging the disaster.

    He has remained steadfast in refusing to step down even after most of his Cabinet stop and dependable lawmakers rebelled, narrowing a path for him to hunt a means out as his workforce prepares to barter with worldwide lending establishments.

    ALSO READ | Sri Lanka requires $3 billion help to handle worsening financial disaster

    “Go home Rajapaksas” and “We need responsible leadership,” learn the placards.

    The protest additionally included a lot of children who had organised themselves by means of social media and refuse to simply accept any political management. Many carried indicators, saying “You messed with the wrong generation!”

    The protesters stayed across the president’s workplace and vowed to not depart till their mission is completed.

    For months, Sri Lankans have stood in lengthy traces to purchase gas, cooking gasoline, meals and medicines, most of which come from overseas and are paid for in onerous forex.

    The gas scarcity has precipitated rolling energy cuts lasting a number of hours a day.

    ALSO WATCH | Sri Lankan Economic Crisis: How India helps Sri Lanka

    The Indian Ocean island nation is getting ready to chapter, saddled with USD 25 billion international debt over the subsequent 5 years — almost USD 7 billion of which is due this 12 months alone — and dwindling international reserves. Talks with the International Monetary Fund are anticipated later this month, and the federal government had turned to China and India for emergency loans to purchase meals and gas.

    Much of the anger expressed by weeks of rising protests has been directed at Rajapaksa and his elder brother, Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa, who head an influential clan that has been in energy for many of the previous 20 years.

    Five different relations are lawmakers, three of whom resigned as ministers final Sunday.

    Thakshila Jayasinghe, a 35-year-old lawyer who joined the protest, stated that she felt sorry for voting for Rajapaksa within the 2019 presidential election.

    ALSO READ | Sri Lankan disaster places highlight on debt, freebie tradition in India

    “I wonder what sin I have committed by voting for this president when I see the people suffer,” she said.

    Reports said that at least four elderly people have died while standing in lines for hours trying to buy cooking gas or kerosene oil.

    Jayasinghe said she voted for Rajapaksa believing he was the best candidate to restore national security following the 2019 Easter Sunday bomb attacks that killed more than 260 people.

    The attacks, blamed on local Muslim militants with ties to the Islamic State group, also shattered the tourism industry, alongside the pandemic, depriving Sri Lanka of hard currency.

    At the same time, critics accuse Rajapaksa of borrowing heavily to finance projects that earn no money, such as a port facility built with Chinese loans.

    Catholic clergy and lay people joined a rally from the “martyrs cemetery” in Negombo, north of the capital Colombo, the place greater than 100 individuals who died within the suicide assaults within the space’s St. Sebastian’s Church are buried.

    They protested the financial disaster in addition to the federal government’s alleged failure to uncover the conspirators behind the bombings.

    ALSO READ | Sri Lankan financial disaster defined in 5 charts

    “Today the country needs a major change and a new beginning,” Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith, the archbishop of Colombo, informed protesters. “We ask from every citizen of this country to come together and change this system. To get together and tell these people to leave.”

    “It’s enough now, it’s enough destroying the country, now leave and hand it over to someone who can govern this country,” he stated.

    The protest later moved close to the Anglican cathedral in Colombo.

    The Catholic Church in Sri Lanka has been important of the investigation into the bombings, citing allegations that some members of the state intelligence items knew and met with no less than one of many attackers.

    Rajapaksa earlier proposed the creation of a unity authorities following the Cabinet resignations, however the primary opposition social gathering rejected the thought. Parliament has failed to achieve a consensus on find out how to take care of the disaster after almost 40 governing coalition lawmakers stated they might not vote in accordance with coalition directions, considerably weakening the federal government.

    With opposition events divided, they too haven’t been in a position to present majority and take management of Parliament.