Sri Lanka Police have imposed a curfew and fired tear gas at demonstrators protesting over dire food, fuel and power shortages outside the President’s house.
Agitated protesters stormed the President’s residence through barricades, and were accused of setting fire to a bus on Thursday, March 31, 2022, into Friday (April 1, 2022) dawn.
The protest outside the President’s house began peacefully, but participants said things turned violent after the Police fired tear gas, water cannons and also beat people present. Protesters also said a number of them have also been detained. Protesters retaliated against the police by pelting them with stones.
President Gotabhaya Rajapaksa blamed the events on “extremist elements”. Sri Lanka is in the midst of a foreign exchange crisis that has crippled its economy. Faced with a 13-hour power cut, lack of fuel, essential food items and medicines, has compelled public anger to reach a new high. News reports suggest that the President and his Ministers are exempt from the power cuts, along with opulent displays of wealth by family members, have only increased anger.
The demonstrations marked a massive turnaround in popularity for Mr. Rajapaksa who swept into power with a majority win in 2019, promising stability and a “strong hand” to rule the country. Critics have been pointing to rank corruption and nepotism, as his brothers and nephews occupy several key Ministerial portfolios, as it is one of the main reasons for the situation the country finds itself in.
The varied cause of Issues in Sri Lanka
The government has been blaming the crisis on the COVID-19 pandemic’s impact on tourism, one of the Island nation’s main sources of foreign revenue, along with a series of attacks on churches on Easter Sunday in 2019, which led to a marked drop in tourists. But experts say that this crisis has been a long time in the making.
Jayadeva Uyangoda, a Political Scientist and Commentator, disclosed to the media that “This is an implosion, an accumulated outcome of what has been building up for a couple of decades and as usual there is no one to take responsibility for it. Of course, the present government is directly responsible for its wilful mismanagement of the crisis since they came into power in 2019 by sheer incompetency, arrogance and of course corruption”.
Sri Lanka’s Former Deputy Central Bank Governor, WA Wijewardena, told the media that Sri Lanka made a fundamental mistake in not integrating with the global economy after the end of a civil war in 2009 which saw its economy grow at rates of almost 9%.
“Exports which accounted for 33% of Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in 2000 have now fallen to 12% and remain at that level.”
Former Deputy Central Bank Governor, WA Wijewardena
In the more immediate term, a government refusal to let the Sri Lankan Rupee depreciate also took a massive toll on its foreign reserves. Accordingly, foreign reserves which stood at $7.6bn (£5.8bn) at the end of 2019 have now fallen to a level of $2.3 bn; of those reserves, usable reserves have fallen to some $300mn.
Mr Wijewardena feels things will get a lot worse before they get better, as there is no sustainable flow of foreign exchange for the heavily import-reliant country. Sri Lanka no longer has enough dollars to buy essential items like fuel to start vehicles or even generate power.
As a result, the country’s electricity board has been imposing power cuts that have grown longer in duration. On Thursday, March 31, 2022, power was switched off for 13 hours, with 16-hour cuts expected in the coming days. The situation, natives said, has disrupted businesses, education and day to day life for millions.
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