Several area residents in Colombo have stepped out of their homes to protest against the recent developments in the country. Srilanka economic crisis.#SriLanka. pic.twitter.com/g4U9Lh4R70
— Shobana (@Shobana_29) April 3, 2022
Public protest in Rajagiriya braving the rain.#srilanka #lka pic.twitter.com/B97bzRJkzU
— NewsRadio - TNLRN (@newsradiolk) April 3, 2022
Late last week, the International Monetary Fund (IMF), which is based in Washington, D.C., quickly entered into talks with Sri Lankan officials regarding a rescue loan, as Rajapaksa was scheduled to hop aboard a flight to the U.S. capital for additional discussions with the agency's officials. The unrest stems from several factors that led to the South Asian island nation losing more than 70 percent of its foreign exchange reserves since the COVID-19 pandemic began, including a collapse in tourism -- a major income producer for the country -- as well as ill-timed tax cuts. Bloomberg news added: The island nation is undergoing a severe shortage of food and fuel as it runs out of dollars to pay for imports. Inflation has accelerated to almost 19%, the highest in Asia and has played a major part in people taking to the streets to call for Rajapaksa and his family to resign from government. Rajapaksa's elder brother Mahinda serves as prime minister and Basil, the youngest, holds the finance portfolio, while the eldest Chamal controls the agriculture ministry and nephew Namal is the sports minister. In a possible sign of friction within the clan, Namal openly criticized the latest curbs involving social media. The Rajapaksa family still enjoys two-thirds majority support in parliament. National elections will be held in 2023 at the earliest. The outlet also reported that in recent weeks, Rajapaksa's administration moved to devalue the country's currency, the rupee, while also raising interest rates and putting limits on non-essential imports. Also, the government cut back on stock-trading hours in order to preserve electricity and foreign currency. Rajapaksa has also ended his prior resistance to being bailed out by the IMF while also entering talks with other countries including China and India for bilateral aid. But the point is, this is just the beginning: The global collapse that began with bad pandemic policies in the form of enduring lockdowns has created a chain reaction of economic fallout that can't be stopped. More unrest in more countries is coming. Sources include: Bloomberg.com ZeroHedge.comPeople of Panadura thanking the Panadura police for the support in today's protest! Gotas curfew turned out to be just like Gota. INEFFECTIVE! Power to the People! #GoHomeGota #GoHomeGota2022 #GoHomeRajapaksas #wakeupsrilanka #SriLanka #SriLankaEconomicCrisis pic.twitter.com/HdzxDG2sCe
— Siraj Noorani (@sirajnoorani) April 3, 2022
By Arsenio Toledo // Share
Pfizer docs: Moderna’s COVID-19 vaccine can damage the immune system
By Mary Villareal // Share
Naomi Wolf: Pfizer FULLY AWARE of the dangers of its mRNA COVID vaccine
By Ramon Tomey // Share
Global rice production to plunge by 10%, hundreds of millions to be affected
By Ethan Huff // Share
FTC’s junk fee ban: A step toward transparency or regulatory overreach?
By willowt // Share
Congress passes slimmed-down funding bill – a VICTORY for Trump and Musk
By bellecarter // Share
U.S. airstrike on Syria kills ISIS leader Abu Yusif
By arseniotoledo // Share
U.S. has more than doubled troops in Syria, hides expansion for years
By bellecarter // Share