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The Financial Express

Sri Lanka parliament extends emergency amid continued crisis

| Updated: July 28, 2022 17:07:59


Sri Lanka parliament extends emergency amid continued crisis

It approved the extension of a state of emergency for a month, a lawmaker said, in a bid to get a grip on a political and economic crisis

Sri Lanka's parliament approved the extension of a state of emergency for a month on Wednesday, a lawmaker said, in a bid to get a grip on a political and economic crisis that has forced a change of leadership, reports Reuters.

Then acting-president Ranil Wickremesinghe had declared a state of emergency on July 17. It allows for the military to be given powers to detain people, limit public gatherings and search private property.

The extension means it will continue for a month before it must be approved again, the lawmaker said.

Wickremesinghe won a parliamentary vote to become president three days after he declared the emergency, and a week after Gotabaya Rajapaksa fled the country and resigned from his post of president in the face of widespread protests.

The country of 22 million people has been crippled by an economic crisis, with shortages of fuel, food and other necessities.

The protests, which culminated with crowds swarming into the official presidential residence before Rajapaksa fled on July 13, have largely fizzled out.

Also on Wednesday, Rajapaksa was granted permission to stay a further 14 days in Singapore, where he landed two weeks ago via Maldives, two sources familiar with the matter told Reuters.

The extension will last until August 11, they said.

Singapore's immigration authority did not respond to a request for confirmation of the move. The Singaporean government has said he had not been granted asylum but was in the country on a private visit.

"It is my belief he may eventually consider returning to Sri Lanka but there is no definite political or other stance on this," Sri Lankan government spokesperson Bandula Gunwardena said on Tuesday.

If Rajapaksa returned to Sri Lanka, he might not be protected under law if any charges were filed against him, legal experts said.

"His immunity was only for the duration of his time in office as president. He can be prosecuted for criminal conduct, including bribery and corruption," lawyer Luwie Niranjan Ganeshanathan said.

Wickremesinghe, who served six terms as prime minister, took over as president in a parliamentary vote after Rajapaksa quit.

He has outlined plans to have a donor conference involving India, China and Japan after Sri Lanka secures a rescue line from the International Monetary Fund (IMF). He said on July 18 that negotiations with the IMF were nearing a conclusion.

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