KEY POINTS
  • Sri Lanka imposed a countrywide curfew starting Saturday evening until Monday morning.
  • President Gotabaya Rajapaksa has drawn the anger of protesters, who called for his resignation outside his residence on Thursday.
  • Sri Lanka has immense foreign debt after borrowing heavily on projects that don't earn money. Its foreign debt repayment obligations are around $7 billion for this year alone.
"I don't know why a curfew has been declared. What we need now is not a curfew, we need food, gas, fuel and the freedom to express ourselves," said one protest organizer in Colombo, Sri Lanka.

Sri Lanka imposed a countrywide curfew starting Saturday evening until Monday morning, in addition to a state of emergency declared by the president, in an attempt to prevent more protests blaming the government for a worsening economic crisis.

The government's information head Mohan Samaranayake said that the curfew is being imposed under powers vested with President Gotabaya Rajapaksa. He drew the ire of protesters who called for his resignation outside his residence on Thursday night, leading to police firing tear gas and arresting scores of people.