With no fuel and no cash, Sri Lanka grinds to a halt
Less than a day’s worth of fuel remains, says the energy minister, as the cash-strapped nation extends school closures.
An autorickshaw driver waits in a queue hoping to get fuel near a fuel station in Colombo
Sri
Lanka has less than a day’s worth of fuel left, the energy minister
says, with public transport grinding to a halt as the country’s economic crisis deepens.
Power and energy minister Kanchana Wijesekera on Sunday said petrol
reserves were about 4,000 tonnes, just below one day’s worth of
consumption, as queues snaked through the main city of Colombo for
kilometres.
The
cash-strapped nation on Sunday extended school closures because there
is not enough fuel for teachers and parents to get children to
classrooms, with most pumping stations being without fuel for days.
Sri Lankan Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe told Al Jazeera last
week the petrol shortage will last until July 22 when the next oil
shipment is expected. He said a gas deal has been secured which will
ensure supplies for the next four months.
“It [fuel shortage] is a big setback to the economy and has caused
lot of hardship to people. When we came in, the shortage of dollars
actually contributed to this situation. We have been taking steps since
then especially to get gas which will be available in the next few days,
diesel and furnace oil as well,” he said.
“The issue has been petrol … and that will take a bit of time. We are
hoping to get shipment of petrol by July 22 but I have asked the
[concerned] minister to try to get the shipment earlier.”
ICJ to rule on Myanmar objections to Rohingya genocide case
If the objections are dismissed, the case will move to the next phase and the evidence for the alleged atrocities.
As
genocide cases move slowly through the international courts, many
Rohingya continue to endure enormous hardship
The
International Court of Justice (ICJ) is set to rule on Myanmar’s
preliminary objections to a genocide case brought over the military’s
brutal 2017 crackdown on the mostly Muslim Rohingya.
The court heard arguments on the objections in February, and ICJ President Judge Joan E Donoghue will read out its decision on Friday at 3pm (13:00 GMT).
Akila
Radhakrishnan, president of the Global Justice Center (GJC) in New
York, says it is “reasonably likely” that the ICJ will reject the
objections, allowing the court to move to the next stage of the process —
the merits phase — when it will consider the factual evidence against
Myanmar.
“These objections were nothing more than a delaying tactic and it is
disappointing that the ICJ has taken a year and a half to make its
decision,” Tun Khin, president of the Burmese Rohingya Organisation UK
(BROUK), told Al Jazeera. “The genocide is ongoing and it is vital that
the court doesn’t allow any further delays.”
Here are some more details about the lawsuits Myanmar and its military are facing, and what is at stake.
What is the ICJ case?
The Gambia took the case against Myanmar to the ICJ in November 2019,
with the backing of the 57-member Organisation for Islamic Cooperation,
after a brutal military crackdown in the northwestern state of Rakhine
forced hundreds of thousands of Rohingya to flee into neighbouring Bangladesh.
Myanmar is accused of breaching the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide(PDF).
The ICJ has already ordered Myanmar to take urgent measures to protect the Rohingya, with the judges saying it had “caused irreparable damage” to the group’s rights.
Rohingya
continue to attempt risky journeys to escape Myanmar and Bangladesh.
This group was stranded off the coast of the Indonesian province of
Aceh in December
A United Nations investigation found in 2018 that the crackdown had been carried out with “genocidal intent” and recommended that Senior General Min Aung Hlaing and five generals be prosecuted.
The UN mission’s chairman Marzuki Darusman said the victim accounts
were among “the most shocking human rights violations” he had come
across and would “leave a mark on all of us for the rest of our lives”.
In March this year, the United States determined the Myanmar military’s actions against the Rohingya amounted to genocide.
Myanmar has denied genocide and says the crackdown in 2017 targeted Rohingya rebels who had attacked police posts.
The
military, which staged a coup in February 2021, has now taken control
of the case, replacing elected leader Aung San Suu Kyi, who initially defended Myanmar
at the court in The Hague. She has not been seen in public since the
coup and is on trial in secret military courts on dozens of charges.
Some rights groups and activists have raised concerns about the ICJ dealing with the military’s representatives.
They note that Myanmar’s United Nations ambassador remains Kyaw Moe
Tun, who was appointed by Aung San Suu Kyi’s National League for
Democracy and is now aligned with the National Unity Government
established by politicians who were overthrown.
What are Myanmar’s objections?
The objections, filed a month before the military coup, have not been revealed publicly.
But court proceedings indicate Myanmar is contesting The Gambia’s
right to bring the case and whether the ICJ has the necessary
jurisdiction.
Myanmar ratified the Genocide Convention in 1956 and The Gambia in 1978.