SRI Lanka police fired tear gas to split up students trying to storm the president’s house yesterday, as the government offers an olive branch to demonstrators demanding his resignation.
Anti-riot squads used water cannon followed by tear gas, as furious protesters pulled down yellow iron barricades across a road leading to President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s official residence in Colombo.
Thousands of men and women demonstrated for the 51st straight day outside Rajapaksa’s seafront office nearby, demanding he step down over the worst economic crisis to hit the country since independence.
Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe went on national television yesterday evening offering young protesters a greater say in how the country is administered.
“The youth are calling for a change in the existing system,” he said, laying out plans for 15 committees that will work with Parliament to decide national policies.
“I propose to appoint four youth representatives to each of the 15 committees.”
He added that they can be drawn from the current protesters.
The demonstrations led to tense scenes in Colombo, where authorities struggled to disperse large crowds and chemical irritants hung over the streets.
Several men were seen picking up canisters spewing tear gas and throwing them back towards the officers who fired them.
Female medical and science students joined the protests, with many running for cover when authorities unleashed water cannon.
Wickremesinghe is not from Rajapaksa’s party, but was given the job after the president’s elder brother Mahinda resigned as prime minister following weeks of protests on May 9 and when no other legislator agreed to step in.
Wickremesinghe is the sole parliamentary representative of the United National Party, a once-powerful political force that was nearly wiped out in last elections.
Rajapaksa’s party, which has a majority in the legislature, has offered to provide him with the necessary support to run a government.
The student action yesterday comes a day after a similar clash, when protesters tried to storm Rajapaksa’s heavily guarded colonial-era official residence, where he has bunkered down since thousands surrounded his private home on March 31.
An unprecedented shortage of foreign exchange to import even the most essential supplies, including food, fuel and medicines, has led to severe hardships for the 22 million people in the country.
The government last month asked the International Monetary Fund for urgent financial assistance. Talks are continuing.
The country has defaulted on its US$51 billion (RM222 billion) foreign debt.
Its currency has depreciated by 44.2% against the US dollar this year, while inflation hit a record 33.8% last month. – AFP, May 30, 2022.
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