First killing by police in Sri Lanka protests

First killing by police in Sri Lanka protests

First killing by police in Sri Lanka protests

First killing by police in Sri Lanka protests

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Sri Lanka police shot lifeless one guy and wounded 10 others on Tuesday in the first fatal conflict with demonstrators protesting the island nation’s crippling economic disaster.

The island country is within the grip of its most painful monetary downturn given its independence in 1948, with intense shortages of important items together with gasoline and regular blackouts causing great distress.

Huge protests have called for the resignation of the authorities, that are preparing to barter an urgently wished bailout with the International Monetary Fund.

Police fired live rounds at a crowd that had blockaded a highway in the central town of Rambukkana to protest oil shortages and high prices, hospital and police officials told AFP.

The protest was one of many spontaneous gatherings staged around Sri Lanka on Tuesday after the country’s main petrol retailer hiked prices by nearly 65 percent.

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Tens of thousands of angry motorists in various parts of the country blocked arterial roads with mounds of burning tires to condemn the move.

In the capital Colombo, a large crowd of protesters has maintained a camp outside the seafront office of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa for more than a week, demanding the leader step down.

Doctors at Sri Lanka’s main children’s hospital also staged a protest on Tuesday over a severe shortage of medicines and equipment.

In a bid to address growing calls for his entire government to resign, Rajapaksa on Monday appointed a new cabinet and acknowledged public anger over the ruling family’s mismanagement.

“People are suffering because of the economic crisis and I deeply regret it,” the president said Monday.

Sri Lanka is seeking three to four billion dollars from the IMF to overcome its balance-of-payments crisis and boost depleted reserves.

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Dozens of Rajapaksa’s lawmakers have turned against the administration and on Tuesday took seats on opposition benches in parliament.

Sri Lanka’s economic meltdown began after the coronavirus pandemic torpedoed vital revenue from tourism and remittances.

The government last week announced a default on Sri Lanka’s $51 billion foreign debt and the Colombo Stock Exchange has suspended trading to prevent an anticipated market collapse.

The government has entreated residents abroad to donate foreign exchange to assist pay for desperately wanted essentials after saying a default on its complete external debt.

A government delegation is in Washington to open bailout talks with the International Monetary Fund from Tuesday.

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