Protesters have been demanding the Sri Lankan president’s resignation ever since the country plunged into crisis.
Written by Manjiri Sachin Chitre | Edited by Sohini Goswami
A large number of protesters on Thursday gathered outside Sri Lankan president Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s office, furious over the one of the worst economic crisis plaguing the island nation.
In a video posted by news agency ANI, a massive gathering could be seen outside the President’s house amid a huge number of security forces deployed at the spot.
Protesters have been demanding the Sri Lankan president’s resignation ever since the country plunged into crisis.
Also read: Help us to get global support for economic recovery, Lankan envoy asks NSA Doval
The island nation is struggling to get essential supplies, including food, cooking gas, fuel and medicine.
Central bank governor Nandalal Weerasinghe during a briefing on Thursday said the country “would not be able to make payments until its debt is restructured and the country is in pre-emptive default”. The central bank governor added that “there is an urgent need for the new leaders of the country to bring the economic situation to stability”.
The default came after a 30-day grace period to repay $78m of debt interest payments expired on Wednesday.
Also read: ‘Looks a lot like Sri Lanka’: Rahul Gandhi’s swipe at Centre over price rise
Weerasinghe further said the country will be lowering the amount of foreign currency that individuals can hold to $10,000 from $15,000. He added that the government will penalise anyone who holds foreign currency for more than three months by making it against the law. The country’s central bank chief also urged people to deposit excess foreign currency in a bank or convert it into local currency within two weeks.
Sri Lanka has a total foreign debt of $51 billion. However, as per the Sri Lankan finance ministry, the country has only $25 million in usable foreign reserves.
(With agency inputs)
-
Monkeypox outbreak: UK health experts warn gay, bisexual men against the virus
Are gay and bisexual communities more vulnerable to the new monkeypox virus? The new virus – now spreading across Europe and also reported in the United States – has already alarmed health experts. Now, the United Kingdom Health Security Agency has said recent confirmed cases are predominantly from those who are gay or bisexual or are men who have sex with men. The UKHSA is contacting potential close contacts of the infected patients.
-

China’s Xi urges BRICS countries to strengthen cooperation
Chinese President Xi Jinping on Thursday said the BRICS countries – Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa – need to strengthen political trust and security cooperation and help stabilise international relations at a time of global turbulence. China has instead blamed the conflict on the aggressive policies of the US and North Atlantic Treaty Organisation (Nato) in eastern Europe.
-

WHO clears China’s CanSino Covid vaccine for emergency use
The World Health Organisation on Thursday granted an emergency use authorisation for Chinese manufacturer CanSinBIO’s Convidecia Covid-19 vaccine , the third Chinese vaccine to be granted such clearance. “The vaccine meets WHO standards for protection against Covid-19 and… the benefits of the vaccine far outweigh risks,” the UN health agency said in a statement. It was found to have 64% efficacy against symptomatic disease and 92% against severe Covid-19, the statement said.
-

China accuses US of ‘interference’ after top official meets the Dalai Lama
Beijing on Thursday criticised the meeting of a senior American diplomat and the 14th Dalai Lama, calling it a violation of Washington’s commitment to the position that Tibet is a part of China. Explicitly referring to the Dalai Lama as a “separatist”, the Chinese foreign ministry said the US also interfered in its “internal affairs” by appointing a special official for Tibetan affairs.
-
‘Forgive me…’: Russian solider to wife of Ukraine civilian he murdered
‘I acknowledge my blame… I ask you to forgive me’ – the words of a 21-year-old Russian soldier on trial for war crimes in Ukraine, specifically the killing of an unarmed 62-year-old civilian in the northeast Ukrainian village of Chupakhivka on February 28. A tank commander, Vadim Shishimarin, is the first Russian soldier to stand trial for war crimes in Ukraine and pleaded guilty Wednesday.