Neomal’s son, accused of burning RW’s house, flees from SL!

Evan Perera, the son of former Deputy Minister Neomal Perera, who is accused of causing damage to the private residence of Acting President Ranil Wickremesinghe on the 9th of July, has reportedly fled the country.

“Lankadeepa” had reported, citing Criminal Investigation Department sources, that the son of this Deputy Minister had left for Dubai on the 10th of this month.

It is also reported that former Deputy Foreign Affairs Minister Neomal Perera is also a member of the SJB Executive Committee.

Neomal Perera, who was first elected to Parliament from the Puttalam district representing the United National Party, later held the position of Deputy Minister of Foreign Affairs in the United People’s Freedom Alliance Government.

At the last election, he joined the Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) under the leadership of Sajith Premadasa. It is also reported that he is serving as the party’s Puttalam District Organizer.

After the protesters had stormed the Presidential Palace on the 09th, Evan Perera had posted a video on social media saying, “We raided the Presidential Palace and now we are on our way to raid Ranil Wickremesinghe’s house,” and invited more people from around the country to join them. Ranil Wickramasinghe’s house was raided and he requested through the video not to leave the house until they received the letter of resignation from the Prime Minister.

The police have commenced an investigation regarding a woman in the video who has aided and abated in the act and this particular woman had been seen on several occasions engaging in the protests in and around Colombo together with a politician n, according to police sources.

According to sources of the Criminal Investigation Department, they have taken over all the videos and photographs related to these incidents and commenced an investigations based on them.

Source: Srilanka Mirror

Vote for a President true to your conscience-Cardinal

Archbishop of Colombo Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith has requested all Members of Parliament to work together true to their conscience in selecting a President who can realise the people’s expectations, setting aside corruption, party politics, and enticing MPs with money.

In a letter to all MPs the Cardinal requested the House to seize the opportunity to ensure maximum contribution in fulfilling the aspirations of the people considering it a historic moment.

The letter also states that more than two million citizens are waiting on this crucial decision for the country’s future, in a rare occasion where a President with executive powers had to relinquish power.

The Cardinal also stated there is fear among the people that the elected public representatives will reach a decision that is against the will of the people.

Cardinal Ranjith therefore questioned if self-respect and the will of the people are less important than the political power gained for a short time period.

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Easter Attacks: Sri Lanka to seek UK Govt & Intel assistance, says Acting President

Acting President Ranil Wickremesinghe has stated that the absence of a proper Easter Sunday investigation has meant that this issue has still not been fully resolved.

Acting President Wickremesinghe also said that due to the incomplete nature of the Easter Sunday attack investigation, he is requesting the assistance of the UK Government and their intelligence services.

In a special statement, Acting President Wickremesinghe, explained that when he took over as Prime Minister on May 13th the economy had collapsed, with power cuts lasting 5 hours a day. In the two months since then, the Acting President explained that power cuts had been reduced to 3 hours a day, fertiliser has been provided to the farmers and the gas shortage in the country has been solved.

He further stated that last minute he explained July would be a difficult period for the supply of fuel. However, diesel stocks have been secured and are being distributed while from the 21st of July petrol will also be distributed.

He also explained that relief was being provided to the citizens of the country who are struggling with the economic crisis. The Acting President stated that the loans taken by paddy farmers who have planted fields less than 2 acres have been cancelled. While due to the drop in the world oil prices, the fuel prices in the country have also been reduced.

While highlighting the steps taken so far, the Acting President further explained that negotiations with the International Monetary Fund (IMF) were nearing conclusion, and discussions for assistance with foreign countries was also progressing.

He went on to explain that the current political crisis in the country is due to the Executive Presidency, and stated that the 19th Amendment would be re-introduced which would address many of the concerns of the public.

The Acting President went on to explain that there were elements within society who were attempting to disrupt the peace in the country. He explained that these elements would be prohibited from disrupting the country’s progress. Wickremesinghe further stated that the peaceful protesters who had legitimate concerns would be engaged with by the Government and solutions would be found for them.

Acting President Wickremesinghe called upon the political parties in the country to put aside their differences and not allow the country to suffer over differences over an individual. He urged them to come together and form an All-Party Government which would allow the country to recover from the economic crisis.

Source: News 1st

Sri Lanka crisis is a warning to other Asian nations

Sri Lanka is in the midst of a deep and unprecedented economic crisis that has sparked huge protests and seen its president quit after fleeing the country – but other countries could be at risk of similar troubles, according to the head of the International Monetary Fund (IMF).

“Countries with high debt levels and limited policy space will face additional strains. Look no further than Sri Lanka as a warning sign,” said IMF Managing Director Kristalina Georgieva on Saturday.

She said developing nations had also been experiencing sustained capital outflows for four months in a row, putting their dreams of catching up with advanced economies at risk.

Sri Lanka is struggling to pay for crucial imports like food, fuel and medicine for its 22 million people as it battles a foreign exchange crisis. Inflation has soared about 50%, with food prices 80% higher than a year ago. The Sri Lankan rupee has slumped in value against the US dollar and other major global currencies this year.

Many blame ex-President Gotabaya Rajapaksa for mishandling the economy with disastrous policies whose impact was only exacerbated by the pandemic.

Over the years, Sri Lanka had built up a huge amount of debt – last month, it became the first country in the Asia Pacific region in 20 years to default on foreign debt.

Officials had been negotiating with the IMF for a $3bn (£2.5bn) bailout. But those talks are currently stalled amid the political chaos.

But the same global headwinds – rising inflation and interest rate hikes, depreciating currencies, high levels of debt and dwindling foreign currency reserves – also affect other economies in the region.

China has been a dominant lender to several of these developing nations and therefore could control their destinies in crucial ways. But it’s largely unclear what Beijing’s lending conditions have been, or how it may restructure the debt.

Where China is at fault, according to Alan Keenan from International Crisis Group, is in encouraging and supporting expensive infrastructure projects that have not produced major economic returns.

“Equally important has been their active political support for the ruling Rajapaksa family and its policies… These political failures are at the heart of Sri Lanka’s economic collapse, and until they are remedied through constitutional change and a more democratic political culture, Sri Lanka is unlikely to escape its current nightmare.”

Worryingly, other countries appear to be on a similar trajectory.

Laos
The landlocked East Asian nation of more than 7.5 million people has been facing the risk of defaulting on its foreign loans for several months.

Now, a rise in oil prices because of the Russian invasion of Ukraine has put further strain on fuel supplies, pushing up the cost of food in a country where an estimated third of people live in poverty.

Local media outlets have reported long lines for fuel, and said some households had been unable to pay their bills.

Laos’ currency, the kip, has been plunging and is down by more than a third against the US dollar this year.

Higher interest rates in the US have strengthened the dollar, and weakened local currencies, increasing their debt burden and making imports costlier.

Laos, which is already heavily in debt, is struggling to repay those loans or or pay for imports like fuel. The World Bank says the country had $1.3bn of reserves as of December last year.

But its total annual external debt obligations are around the same amount until 2025 – equivalent to about half of the country’s total domestic revenue.

As a result, Moody’s Investor Services last month downgraded the communist-ruled nation to “junk”, a category in which debt is considered high risk.

China has loaned Laos huge amounts of money in recent years to fund big projects like a hydropower plant and a railway. According to Laotian officials speaking to Chinese state news agency Xinhua, Beijing has undertaken 813 projects worth more than $16bn last year alone.

Laos’ public debt amounted to 88% of its Gross Domestic Product (GDP) in 2021, according to the World Bank, with almost half of that figure owed to China.

Experts point to years of economic mismanagement in the country, where one party – the Lao People’s Revolutionary Party – has held power since 1975.

But Moody’s Analytics has flagged increased trade with China and the export of hydroelectricity as positive developments. “Laos has a fighting chance of avoiding the danger zone and the need for a bailout,” economist Heron Lim said in a recent report.

Pakistan

Fuel prices in Pakistan are up by around 90% since the end of May, after the government ended fuel subsidies. It’s trying to rein in spending as it negotiates with the IMF to resume a bailout programme.

The economy is struggling with the rising cost of goods. In June, the annual inflation rate hit 21.3%, the highest it has been in 13 years.

Like Sri Lanka and Laos, Pakistan also faces low foreign currency reserves, which have almost halved since August last year.

It has imposed a 10% tax on large-scale industry for one year to raise $1.93bn as it tries to reduce the gap between government revenue and spending – one of the IMF’s key demands.

“If they are able to unlock these funds, other financial lenders like Saudi Arabia and the UAE [United Arab Emirates] may be willing to extend credit,” Andrew Wood, sovereign analyst at S&P Global Ratings told the BBC.

Former Prime Minister Imran Khan who vowed to fix some of these problems, was ousted from power although the faltering economy is not the only reason for that.

Last month, a senior minister in Pakistan’s government asked citizens to reduce the amount of tea they drink to cut the country’s import bills.

Again China plays a role here, with Pakistan reportedly owing more than a quarter of its debt to Beijing.

“Pakistan appears to have renewed a commercial loan facility vis-a-vis China and this has added to its foreign exchange reserves and there are indications they will reach out to China for the second half of this year,” Mr Wood added.

Maldives

The Maldives has seen its public debt swell in recent years and it’s now well above 100% of its GDP.

Like Sri Lanka, the pandemic hammered an economy that was heavily reliant on tourism.

Countries that depend so much on tourism tend to have higher public debt ratios, but the World Bank says the island nation is particularly vulnerable to higher fuel costs because its economy is not diversified.

US investment bank JPMorgan has said the holiday destination is at risk of defaulting on its debt by the end of 2023.

Bangladesh

Inflation hit an 8-year high in May in Bangladesh, touching 7.42%.

With reserves dwindling, the government has acted fast to curb non-essential imports, relaxing rules to attract remittances from millions of migrants living overseas and reducing foreign trips for officials.

“For economies running current account deficits – such as Bangladesh, Pakistan and Sri Lanka – governments face serious headwinds in increasing subsidies. Pakistan and Sri Lanka have turned to the IMF and other governments for financial assistance,” Kim Eng Tan, a sovereign analyst at S&P Global Ratings, told the BBC.

“Bangladesh has had to re-prioritise government spending and impose restrictions on consumer activities,” he said.

Rising food and energy prices are threatening the pandemic-battered world economy. Now developing nations that have borrowed heavily for years are finding that their weak foundations make them particularly vulnerable to global shockwaves.

Source: BBC News

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Parliament entry roads closed off as security tightened

The security around the Parliament complex has been tightened and all the entry roads leading to it have been closed off with roadblocks, according to Ada Derana reporter.

Meanwhile, the Parliament is scheduled to convene tomorrow (19) at 10.00 a.m. chaired by the Speaker Mahinda Yapa Abeywardena.

Due to the current political crisis in the country, the calling of nominations to appoint a successor president is scheduled to be held tomorrow.

The voting related to this will be held as a secret ballot in the Parliament the next day (20).

It has already been announced that five members, including Acting President Ranil Wickramasinghe and Opposition Leader Sajith Premadasa, will contest the election to appoint the successor president.

Accordingly, tomorrow, their nominations will be handed over to the General Secretary of the Parliament and then he will announce it before the Parliament.

The candidate who gets more than 50 percent of the votes of the Members of Parliament who will vote on the day of the polling will be elected as the new president.

Each political party in the parliament has already announced the candidate they will support while the SLFP has said it will abstain from voting.

It is said that the votes of the members of the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP), which controls the majority power in the Parliament, is a strong factor in electing the new president.

SLPP has 145 parliamentary seats in the current parliament and Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) has 54 parliamentary seats.

Illankai Tamil Arasu Kadchi (ITAK) has 10 seats, National People’s Power (NPP) has 3 seats, Eelam People’s Party and Akila Ilankei Tamil Congress have 2 seats each.

Apart from this, Tamil Makkal Vidudalep Pulikal (TMVP), Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP), Muslim National Alliance, Tamil Makkal Thesia Kuttani, Ahila Ilangei Mahajana Congress, National Congress, Sri Lanka Muslim Congress, United National Party and Ape Janabala Pakshaya have one seat each.

Source: Adaderana

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The hard choices Sri Lankans must make now

“No time for Gota ‘cos we are the champions… of the world!”

It is a hot afternoon at Galle Face Green, the epicentre of Sri Lanka’s fledgling protest movement. Above the sea of tents at the protest village floats the voice of a woman, singing her unique take on a Queen song.

For months, these protesters have been at the forefront of the millions-strong Aragalaya movement – named after the Sinhalese word for “struggle” – calling for the resignation of reviled president Gotabaya Rajapaksa.

Sri Lankans hold him and his elder brother, former president Mahinda, chiefly responsible for their country’s economic ruin.

Defying all expectations, the protesters have won a victory. Last week Gota, as he is popularly known, quit and fled.

But now comes the hard part: grappling with the political aftermath of Mr Rajapaksa’s departure and making some very difficult decisions.

Can Sri Lanka’s acting president restore order?
How Sri Lanka’s war heroes became villains
Why is Sri Lanka in crisis?
With Mr Rajapaksa gone, protesters have turned their sights on Ranil Wickremesinghe, the unpopular former prime minister.

He is seen as someone with close ties with the Rajapaksas, a powerful dynasty that ruled Sri Lanka for nearly two decades.

As the current acting president, he has little legitimacy in the eyes of the people. Mr Wickremesinghe failed in past presidential campaigns and lost his own seat in parliament in 2020. He is seen as having got the top post by sheer circumstance, after Mr Rajapaksa appointed him caretaker leader while making his hasty exit.

Last Wednesday, thousands of Sri Lankans stormed the prime minister’s office. At Galle Face Green, where the slogan “Gota Go Home” has dominated for months, the refrain is morphing to “Ranil Go Home”.

But Mr Wickremesinghe has vowed to follow the constitutional process, and will remain in power until parliament votes in a new president on Wednesday.

Many believe he could throw his hat in the ring and possibly win with the support of the Rajapaksas’ ruling Sri Lanka People’s Front party (SLPP).

A six-time prime minister who has never completed any of his terms, tainted by corruption scandals during his time in office, Mr Wickremesinghe has a flawed track record to say the least.

But he does have experience of running the country and is thought to have the support of many MPs who want stability and continuity.

There are others laying claim to the throne, such as opposition leader Sajith Premadasa and Dullas Alahapperuma, a SLPP MP. But this may mean a split vote – which could benefit Mr Wickremesinghe.

Meanwhile, the clock is ticking for Sri Lanka. Its central bank governor told the BBC it is uncertain they have enough foreign currency to buy fuel after the end of this month. The country urgently needs a leader to negotiate with the International Monetary Fund for a much-needed bailout of its debt.

Could protesters stomach a compromise, and accept Mr Wickremesinghe for the time being to ride out the economic storm?

No, said everyone the BBC spoke to last week. So tarnished is his reputation that they prefer anyone except him.

“He came into power saying he was going to hold everyone accountable, the Rajapaksas even, but he did nothing. It’s absurd to think that people are going to trust him again,” said university student Anjalee Wanduragala.

On Saturday, protest organiser Nuzly Hameem called on parliamentarians to listen to the people and deny Mr Wickremesinghe the presidency.

“If you are going to support Ranil as president of this country, when the next election happens, you will not be supported by the people and you should remember that,” he warned.

Protest organisers have vowed to continue demonstrating if Mr Wickremesinghe wins power on Wednesday.

The only way he could possibly mollify them is if he is able to solve the economic crisis – or at least get an uninterrupted supply of fuel – but that will not happen overnight.

Some argue the demonstrations would only hinder and distract at a time when the country needs to come together to dig itself out of the hole.

“Aragalaya has to accept whoever comes into power next. You cannot keep protesting,” one lawmaker told organisers in a meeting last week.

But the deeper question is whether continued protest is justifiable.

The strength of the Aragalaya movement has been its leaderless, organic nature. It’s what makes it so good at spontaneous mass uprisings – but it also makes it difficult to predict or control.

In the past few months, peaceful marches have morphed into chaotic clashes with military and police. In the past week alone, protesters have stormed the official residences of the president and prime minister, taken over the presidential secretariat building, and attempted to enter parliament.

The movement is now facing backlash from some quarters.

The Bar Association pleaded with protesters to vacate the prime minister’s office last week, saying it would not support “a situation of lawlessness or anarchy”. An ambulance service complained it had been attacked during the chaos.

Some citizens say the protesters have violated the sanctity of Sri Lanka’s institutions by forcing entry to government buildings seen as symbols of state power.

In solidarity with the protesters, some businesses have given them some much needed financing. But they could rethink this if the protests are prolonged and add to the destabilisation of the economy.

Privately, the protest organisers constantly worry the movement could spin off into violence due to fringe elements, the BBC understands.

In recent months demonstrators have torched MPs’ homes, as well as Mr Wickremesinghe’s private residence and the Rajapaksas’ ancestral home.

Security forces are accused of brutality in their attempts to quell demonstrations, including shooting at protesters, badly beating them and firing massive amounts of tear gas. They have injured hundreds of protesters so far.

Organisers are now hoping to dial down the temperature as they press on.

They have vacated most of the buildings they were occupying, and are now stressing they will only focus on peaceful demonstrations.

Asked by the BBC if he thought the protest movement had gone too far, organiser Father Jeevantha Peiris said: “We only wanted a protest rally – that was organised by us. The rest of it we had no control.

“People are desperate, they are in unrest… Ranil is directly responsible for this.”

He said they would be pursuing various forms of non-violent protests such as marches and strikes, as well as occupation of government buildings. “The only thing is we will never let public property get damaged. We don’t want anyone to get hurt,” he said.

But no matter the difficult choices that lie ahead for Sri Lankans in the coming days and weeks, they have already achieved much.

The uprising has for the first time brought together three major communities – Sinhalese, Tamils and Muslims – for a common cause. Men, women, children, Buddhist monks, Christian priests and nuns and Muslim businessmen have all joined in.

“Our younger generations, we have taught them not to turn back. They will go forward, they will be asking for all demands,” said protest leader Visaka Jayaweera.

After so many years in thrall to the Rajapaksas, Sri Lankans have done the unthinkable, prying their country out of the family’s iron grip.

It may go down in history as a moment when ordinary people were emboldened to demand a greater say in how their country should be run.

Sri Lanka’s politicians now know what awaits them if they do not deliver.

Source: BBC
Written by: Tessa Wong & Anbarasan Ethirajan

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Ex-leader Mahinda Rajapaksa will not flee Sri Lanka: Top aide

The man who paved the way for the Rajapaksa dynasty’s dominance over Sri Lankan politics for over two decades has no immediate plans to flee the country, according to a top aide.

Former President and Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa, 76, heads the Rajapaksa clan that most Sri Lankans blame for the country’s worst economic crisis in decades that has triggered the ongoing unrest in the island nation.

Mahinda’s younger brother, President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, escaped to the Maldives on Wednesday after thousands of protesters stormed his residence last week.

He reportedly flew to Singapore in a Saudi plane on Thursday as the nation awaited his resignation.

Another brother and former finance minister, Basil Rajapaksa, also tried to leave the crisis-hit country but was stopped at the airport by the immigration authorities.

However, a top aide of Mahinda Rajapaksa on Thursday said the former strongman and patriarch of the Rajapaksa dynasty has no such plans. Mahinda’s eldest son, former minister Namal, has also publicly stated that he would not leave the country.

“They both have clearly said they would not leave Sri Lanka,” the aide who wished to remain anonymous told Al Jazeera.

Mahinda’s aide also indicated that there was a rift between him and Gotabaya, the military officer-turned-president who fled.

“It was because of him [Mahinda] that Gotabaya came to power, but once elected, the prime minister was sidelined by his own brother,” the aide told Al Jazeera.

“Until the last moment, Gotabaya Rajapaksa didn’t know how to govern but he never listened to Mahinda’s advice.”

Speaking on a social media platform in May, Gotabaya’s cousin Udayanga Weeratunga also said the president never consulted with the prime minister while making decisions.

Weeratunga described Gotabaya as a man “with a military mindset who only understands military way of dealing with things”.

Sri Lankan media have reported that Mahinda was reluctant to nominate Gotabaya as the presidential candidate in the 2019 elections.

A Bloomberg report this week said Namal is being groomed by Mahinda to be a future leader and carry forward the family’s legacy in politics.

Protesters reject aide’s claims
But Sri Lanka’s protesters denounced the comments made by Mahinda Rajapaksa’s aide, describing it as another attempt by the Rajapaksa “cartel” to come back to power.

Vimukthi Dushantha, a member of the Black Cap Movement led by young protesters, said “blaming somebody else” has been a strategy of the Rajapaksa family during a setback.

“Rajapaksas are a family that drank blood from the Sri Lankan society like leeches for years,” he told Al Jazeera. “They always blamed somebody else when they were in trouble.”

“Mahinda Rajapaksa was Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s prime minister, so he cannot now simply say he didn’t know anything.” – Vimukthi Dushantha, Sri Lankan protestor

Dushantha rejected claims made by Mahinda’s aide that the former leader did not agree with the policies pursued by his younger brother, President Gotabaya Rajapaksa.

“Mahinda Rajapaksa was Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s prime minister, so he cannot now simply say he didn’t know anything. This is another propaganda drive to protect Mahinda Rajapaksa, and Namal Rajapaksa by extension.”

Activist Shehan Malaka Gamage said while the Rajapaksa brothers may have political differences, they “would not harm each other under any circumstances”.

“When it comes to family bonds, they are united like nobody else,” he told Al Jazeera.

Mahinda, who entered politics in 1970, became Sri Lanka’s fifth executive president in 2005 after a closely-fought battle with another veteran, current Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe.

Mahinda’s presidency paved the way for several of his brothers, including Gotabaya and Basil, to hold prominent positions in the Sri Lanka administration.

During his presidency, Mahinda, along with then-Defence Secretary Gotabaya, brutally crushed a decades-long rebellion by the ethnic Tamils in the north, a civil war that claimed tens of thousands of lives, including 40,000 civilians.

In the last stages of the civil war that ended in 2009, Mahinda’s government was accused of wartime atrocities, extrajudicial killings and other systematic abuses – allegations the Rajapaksas deny.

Many in the Buddhist-majority nation of 22 million people hailed Mahinda for his brutal crushing of the civil war, calling him a hero.

At the height of their popularity, the Rajapaksas were revered as a “royal family”, with many people, including senior politicians and officials, literally bowing down before them.

Mahinda remained president till 2015, when he lost to the opposition. But the clan made a comeback in 2019 when Gotabaya won the presidential election with a sweeping majority in the wake of the Easter Sunday bombings.

Gotabaya appointed Mahinda as the prime minister in a new Rajapaksa administration in the Buddhist-majority country.

The new government promised to lead Sri Lanka out of the economic slump. But a series of policy mistakes led the island to an unprecedented meltdown.

In a reversal of fortunes for the island’s most powerful clan, Mahinda was forced to resign as prime minister earlier this year following a deadly protest over an escalating economic crisis.

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No change in decision to support RW, says Sagara

The General Secretary of the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna, Attorney-at-Law Sagara Kariyawasam says that he will reply to the letter directed by the party Chairman, Prof. G. L. Peiris, inquiring about the decision taken by the SLPP to support the Acting President, Ranil Wickremesinghe, as a Presidential Candidate.

When inquired by News 1st, the General Secretary of Podujana Peramuna said that there has been no change in the decision taken by his party so far.

Kariyawasam added that the majority opinion of the SLPP remains favorable to the acting President.

Source: News 1st

SLMC to agree with SJB on candidates

The Leader of the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress, Rauff Hakeem says that he agrees with any decision taken by the Samagi Jana Balawegaya regarding the candidates for the election of a new President in Parliament.

The MP stated that the candidate who emerges should be flexible to fulfill the demands of the people without depending on positions.

SLMC Leader Hakeem pointed out that solutions to the problems faced by the people should be found by establishing an all-party Government.

Accordingly, he said that continuous discussions are being held to seek solutions to solve the crisis in SriLanka.

The SLMC Leader also mentioned that the Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna remains divided, as there is no agreement within the Party for a single candidate.

Source: News 1st

Indian government calls an all-party meet on Sri Lanka crisis

The Narendra Modi government has called for an all-party meeting on Tuesday evening to discuss the crucial issue of the Sri Lanka crisis.

India’s Parliamentary Affairs Minister Pralhad Joshi made the announcement on Sunday saying, “On Tuesday, we are calling for another all-party meeting to brief on the Lankan crisis. We have requested Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman and External Affairs Minister S Jaishankar to hold this briefing.”

According to the sources, the foreign secretary is likely to make a presentation before the members on the situation in Sri Lanka and the assistance that India has given in the past to the island nation. And the meeting is likely to start at 5:30 pm.

“The government is calling for suo motto meeting to address the concerns of several political parties, especially in Tamil Nadu as they are worried about the Sri Lankan crisis and the influx of refugees in the state,” the sources said.

In his recent meeting with Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi and External Affairs Minister Jaishankar, Tamil Nadu CM MK Stalin expressed his concern about the situation in Sri Lanka and asked for permission to send relief material to the economically-hit nation.

Sri Lanka is facing an economic and political crisis. Gotabaya Rajapaksa resigned as president after protesters stormed his residence on July 9 and his resignation has been finally accepted by the Parliament Speaker.

Meanwhile, Wickremesinghe was sworn in as Acting President on Friday, and Sri Lanka’s 225-member Parliament will elect the new president by a vote on July 20.

Currently, Sri Lanka is witnessing a severe shortage of fuel and other essential supplies and is in the throes of its worst economic crisis with soaring inflation. The oil supply shortage has forced schools and government offices to close until further notice.

Reduced domestic agricultural production, a lack of foreign exchange reserves, and local currency depreciation have fuelled the shortages.

The economic crisis will push families into hunger and poverty – some for the first time – adding to the half a million people who the World Bank estimates have fallen below the poverty line because of the pandemic.

Amidst the crisis in Sri Lanka, India has extended this year alone support of over USD 3.8 billion for ameliorating the serious economic situation in the island nation as a mark of its Neighbourhood First policy. (ANI)

Source: Adaderana

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