World
Sri Lanka protesters storm President’s House, demand resignation
DEVELOPING STORYDEVELOPING STORY,
1000’s break police barricades and storm the president’s official residence in one of many largest anti-government marches within the nation this yr.
1000’s of protesters in Sri Lanka have damaged by police barricades and stormed the president’s residence and workplace in one of many largest anti-government marches within the crisis-hit nation this yr.
Some protesters, holding Sri Lankan flags and helmets, broke into President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s residence in capital Colombo, video footage from native TV information channels confirmed on Saturday.
Troops fired within the air to forestall offended crowds from overrunning the President’s Home, stories mentioned, including that the beleaguered 73-year-old chief has been moved to a safe however undisclosed location.
Unimaginable photographs from Sri Lanka. pic.twitter.com/OTLG8V4wMp
— Ahmer Khan (@ahmermkhan) July 9, 2022
Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe has known as an emergency assembly of political social gathering leaders amid rising anger over the federal government’s dealing with of an financial disaster.
Wickremesinghe additionally requested the speaker to summon parliament, an announcement from the prime minister’s workplace mentioned.
Many within the island nation of twenty-two million individuals blame the nation’s decline on Rajapaksa. Largely peaceable protests since March have demanded his resignation.
Sri Lanka is struggling underneath a extreme overseas alternate scarcity that has restricted important imports of gasoline, meals and drugs, plunging it into the worst monetary turmoil in 70 years.
Months of protests have practically dismantled the Rajapaksa political dynasty that has dominated Sri Lanka for many of the previous 20 years.
Considered one of Rajapaksa’s brothers resigned as prime minister final month, and two different brothers and a nephew stop their cupboard posts earlier.
Wickremesinghe took over as prime minister in Might and protests quickly waned within the hope he might discover money for the nation’s pressing wants. However individuals now need him to resign as nicely, saying he has didn’t fulfil his guarantees.
‘Full mayhem’
Reporting from Colombo, Al Jazeera’s Minelle Fernandez mentioned safety forces responded with tear gasoline after college college students and different members of the general public congregated on a highway resulting in the president’s home.
“There’s been a heavy safety and particular activity power presence. The comeback was fully excessive with tear gasoline canisters raining right down to disperse the protesters. There was full mayhem, virtually a stampede to get out,” mentioned Fernandez.
Police imposed a curfew in Colombo and several other different important city areas on Friday evening however withdrew it on Saturday morning amid objections by attorneys and opposition politicians who known as it unlawful.
Regardless of a extreme scarcity of gasoline that has stalled transportation providers, demonstrators packed into buses, trains and vehicles from a number of components of the nation to achieve Colombo to protest towards the federal government’s failure to guard them from financial wreck.
Discontent has worsened in latest weeks because the cash-strapped nation stopped receiving gasoline shipments, forcing college closures and rationing of petrol and diesel for important providers.
Sampath Perera, a 37-year-old fisherman, took an overcrowded bus from the seaside city of Negombo, 40km (25 miles) north of Colombo, to affix the protest.
“Now we have advised Gota over and over to go residence however he’s nonetheless clinging onto energy. We is not going to cease till he listens to us,” Perera mentioned.
He’s among the many thousands and thousands squeezed by power gasoline shortages and inflation that hit 54.6 p.c in June.
Political instability might undermine Sri Lanka’s talks with the Worldwide Financial Fund searching for a $3bn bailout, a restructuring of some overseas debt and fundraising from multilateral and bilateral sources to ease the greenback drought.
In April, Sri Lanka introduced it’s suspending repaying overseas loans as a consequence of a overseas forex scarcity. Its whole overseas debt quantities to $51bn of which it should repay $28bn by the tip of 2027.
The financial disaster has led to a heavy scarcity of necessities like gasoline, cooking gasoline and medicines, forcing individuals to face in lengthy strains to purchase restricted provides.
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Israel moves towards ceasefire deal with Hezbollah: reports
Israel is reportedly moving towards a ceasefire agreement with Hezbollah in Lebanon after nearly a year of fighting escalated into an all-out war in September.
Israeli media outlets including YNET and Haaretz have reported that Israel has tentatively agreed to a U.S.-backed proposal for a ceasefire. No final deal has been reached, according to the reports.
Lebanon and the militia group Hezbollah reportedly agreed to the deal last week but both sides need to give the final okay before it can materialize.
The reported ceasefire deal comes after Hezbollah launched one of its largest rocket attacks on Israel in exchange for Israeli forces striking Hezbollah command centers in Beirut.
This is a developing story. Check back for updates.
World
Yamandu Orsi wins Uruguay’s run-off presidential election
Yamandu Orsi, the candidate for the left-wing Broad Front coalition, is projected to emerge victorious in Uruguay’s run-off election for the presidency.
He bested Alvaro Delgado of the ruling National Party to win the tightly fought race, though public opinion polls showed the two candidates in a dead heat in the lead-up to Sunday’s vote.
Orsi’s supporters took to the streets in the capital of Montevideo, as the official results started to show the former mayor and history teacher surging ahead.
Many waved the party banner: a red, blue and white striped flag with the initials FA for “Frente Amplio”, which translates to “Broad Front”.
“Joy will return for the majority,” the coalition posted on social media as Orsi approached victory. “Cheers, people of Uruguay.”
Orsi’s win restores the Broad Front to power in the small South American country, sandwiched on the Atlantic coast between Brazil and Argentina.
For 15 years, from 2005 to 2020, the Broad Front had held Uruguay’s executive office, with the presidencies of Jose Mujica and Tabare Vazquez, the latter of whom won two non-consecutive, five-year terms.
But that winning streak came to an end in the 2019 election, with the victory of current President Luis Lacalle Pou, who led a coalition of right-leaning parties.
Under Uruguay law, however, a president cannot run for consecutive terms. Lacalle Pou was therefore not a candidate in the 2024 race.
Running in his stead was Delgado, a former veterinarian and Congress member who served as a political appointee in Lacalle Pou’s government from 2020 to 2023.
Even before the official results were announced on Sunday, Delgado had conceded, acknowledging Orsi’s victory was imminent.
“Today, the Uruguayans have defined who will hold the presidency of the republic. And I want to send here, with all these actors of the coalition, a big hug and a greeting to Yamandu Orsi,” Delgado said in a speech as he clutched a large Uruguayan flag in his hand.
He called on his supporters to “respect the sovereign decisions” of the electorate, while striking a note of defiance.
“It’s one thing to lose an election, and another to be defeated. We are not defeated,” he said, pledging that his right-wing coalition was “here to stay”.
The outgoing president, Lacalle Pou, also reached out to Orsi to acknowledge the Broad Front’s victory.
“I called [Yamandu Orsi] to congratulate him as president-elect of our country and to put myself at his service and begin the transition as soon as I deem it pertinent,” Lacalle Pou wrote on social media.
Orsi had been considered the frontrunner in the lead-up to the first round of the elections.
Originally from Canelones, a coastal regional in the south of Uruguay, Orsi began his career locally as a history teacher, activist and secretary-general of the department’s government. In 2015, he successfully ran to be mayor of Canelones and won re-election in 2020.
In the 2024 presidential race, Orsi – like virtually all the candidates on the campaign trail – pledged to bolster Uruguay’s economy. He called for salary increases, particularly for low-wage workers, to grow their “purchasing power”.
He also called for greater early childhood education and employment programmes for young adults. According to a United Nations report earlier this year, nearly 25 percent of Uruguay’s children live in poverty.
But the economy was not the only issue at the forefront of voters’ minds. In a June survey from the communications firm Nomade, the largest share of respondents – 29 percent – identified “insecurity” as Uruguay’s “principal problem”.
That dwarfed the second-highest ranked topic: “Unemployment” was only picked by 15 percent of respondents.
As part of his platform, Orsi pledged to increase the police force and strengthen Uruguay’s borders, including through the installation of more security cameras.
As he campaigned, Orsi enjoyed the support of former President Mujica, a former rebel fighter who survived torture under Uruguay’s military dictatorship in the 1970s and ’80s.
Mujica remains a popular figure on Uruguay’s left, best known for his humble living arrangements that once earned him the moniker of the “world’s poorest president”.
In the first round of voting, on October 27, Orsi came out on top, with 44 percent of the vote to Delgado’s 27 percent. But his total was far short of the 50 percent he needed to win the election outright, thereby triggering a run-off.
The race got tighter from there forward. Only two candidates progressed to the run-off – Delgado and Orsi – and Delgado picked up support from voters who had backed former Colorado Party candidate Andres Ojeda, a fellow conservative who was knocked out in the first round.
Nevertheless, Orsi quickly pulled ahead after the polls closed for the run-off election on Sunday.
“The horizon is brightening,” Orsi said in his victory speech. “The country of freedom, equality and also fraternity triumphs once again.”
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