Sri Lankan Police Lifts Curfew from Seven Divisions in Western Province Ahead of Anti-government Protests

Sri Lankan Police has lifted the curfew that was imposed in seven divisions in the country’s Western Province, including Colombo, ahead of planned anti-government protests on Saturday, after coming under sustained pressure from top lawyers’ association, human rights groups and political parties.

The curfew was imposed in seven police divisions in the Western Province, which included Negombo, Kelaniya, Nugegoda, Mount Lavinia, Colombo North, Colombo South and Colombo Central with effect from 9 pm of Friday night until further notice, police said.

“People living in the areas where police curfew had been enforced should strictly limit themselves to their houses and law would be enforced severely against those violating curfew,” the Inspector General of Police (IGP) C. D. Wickramaratne announced on Friday.

The Bar Association of Sri Lanka protested the police curfew, terming it illegal and a violation of fundamental rights. Such curfew is blatantly illegal and a violation of the fundamental rights of the people of our country who are protesting against President Gotabaya Rajapakse and his Government over its failure to protect their basic rights, it said.

The body cautioned that the curfew intended to stifle freedom of expression and dissent, which would gravely harm Sri Lanka’s economy and its social, political and international standing. The Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka called the police curfew a gross violation of human rights. The Human Rights Commission informs that the imposition of police curfew arbitrarily by the inspector general of police is illegal. It directs the IGP to recall this illegal order which is a gross violation of the fundamental rights of the people immediately, it said in a statement.

On Friday, police in Sri Lanka’s commercial capital Colombo imposed a curfew after firing tear gas and water cannons on student protesters ahead of a weekend rally, as public outrage escalated over the island nation’s worst economic crisis in seven decades.

The police curfew was imposed to quell the weekend protest rally march to Colombo from around the country is planned over the weekend by religious leaders, political parties, medical practitioners, teachers, civil rights activists, farmers, and fishermen on Saturday demanding the resignation of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe. They blame President Rajapaksa for the country’s economic malaise, the worst since independence in 1948. Sri Lanka, a country of 22 million, is under the grip of an unprecedented economic turmoil in seven decades, crippled by an acute shortage of foreign exchange that has left it struggling to pay for essential imports of fuel, and other essentials.

Meanwhile, US Ambassador to Sri Lanka Julie Chung on Friday urged the country’s military and police to allow peaceful protests. Violence is not an answer… Chaos & force will not fix the economy or bring the political stability that Sri Lankans need right now, she said in a tweet.

Political and economic instability could potentially derail Sri Lanka’s much-awaited USD 3 billion bailout package from the International Monetary Fund (IMF), warned analysts. Last week, Prime Minister Wickremesinghe announced in Parliament that Sri Lanka would present a debt restructuring programme to the IMF by August to secure a bailout package, while underlining that negotiations with the global lender were more complex and difficult than in the past, because the country was bankrupt.

The country, with an acute foreign currency crisis that resulted in foreign debt default, had announced in April that it is suspending nearly USD 7 billion foreign debt repayment due for this year out of about USD 25 billion due through 2026. Sri Lanka’s total foreign debt stands at USD 51 billion.

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