Facebook Instagram Twitter YouTube

Millions in Sri Lanka Hold General Strike amid Historic Economic Crisis

Millions of workers in Sri Lanka held a general strike on Thursday that crippled the island nation. They should extend it indefinitely, ensuring that the working class doesn’t pay a cent for the country’s economic crisis.

Sou Mi

April 29, 2022
Facebook Twitter Share
Trade unions protest during a nationwide strike demanding the resignation of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and his cabinet, blaming them for creating the country's worst economic crisis in decades, in front of the Presidential Secretariat in Colombo, Sri Lanka, on April 28, 2022
Image: Dinuka Liyanawatte / Reuters

On Thursday, April 28, millions of workers in Sri Lanka held a general strike to demand that President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and his government resign as the country’s historic economic crisis worsens.

The strike — the first in over four decades — was endorsed by almost 1,000 trade unions, and crippled the whole country as both public and private sector workers participated. Banks were shut, there was no public transportation, and schools and businesses were closed through the day. In Colombo, the capital city, thousands of workers joined protesters who have been camping outside Rajapaksa’s residence.

Photo: Morning Star

These protests are happening as Sri Lanka’s economic crisis, which had been brewing for years, continues to deepen rapidly, especially as the war in Ukraine rages on. The crisis, the worst in decades, has caused massive shortages in food, fuel, and energy, with the country experiencing 10- to 12-hour long power cuts every day.

Protests have been escalating, and calls for Rajapaksa’s resignation continue to grow. Earlier this month, 40 cabinet members resigned en masse, leaving Rajapaksa with a minority government. Last week, the police also opened fire on protesters, killing one person and injuring two dozen others.

Since the time of our last report, Sri Lanka has defaulted on $52 billion in foreign loans. The Rajapaksa government has also entered into extensive talks with the International Monetary Fund (IMF), looking for a bailout. But such a debt restructuring comes at a great cost for Sri Lanka’s working class as they’ll be forced to implement crippling austerity measures, such as removing price controls, depreciating the currency, liberalizing trade, and implementing privatizations, to name a few. This is par for the course for institutions like the IMF that use economic crises to deepen imperialist exploitation.

Photo: Ishara S. Kodikara/AFP

In the face of this political turmoil, Rajapaksa has invited opposition parties to form a coalition government — an invitation that these parties have thwarted in favor of demanding his resignation. Instead, the main opposition leader, Sajith Premadasa, is currently leading a march to Colombo to coincide with May Day celebrations. 

But let’s be clear: these opposition parties, vying for the top office and still tied to the capitalists, pose no real solutions to the current crisis.

The millions of workers who participated in the general strike on Thursday put forward a powerful alternative. But a one-day general strike is not enough. The trade union leaders have declared that if the Rajapaksa government does not resign, they will undertake a longer strike starting May 6. 

To carve a real solution out of this crisis, it is imperative that workers extend this strike indefinitely, not only to demand the resignation of the current political caste, but also against all the austerity measures imposed with the agreement of both the imperialist and national bourgeoisies. The working class should not pay a single cent for this crisis. 

Sri Lanka’s foreign debt must be canceled, and strategic industries must be nationalized in order to cut off the country’s dependence on imperialist powers. For workers around the world, it is essential to stand in solidarity with workers in Sri Lanka, and above all, to demand, with our full strength, an end to the war in Ukraine which is only exacerbating the crisis and suffering for the masses around the world.

Facebook Twitter Share

Sou Mi

Sou Mi is an activist based in New York City.

Asia-Pacific

A hand holds a phone which displays the TikTok Logo

We Don’t Want TikTok Under Control of U.S. Capitalists — Put It Under the Control of its Workers and Users

The U.S. government wants to force the sale of the incredibly popular Chinese social media app. A TikTok owned by U.S. capitalists will only make things worse. We want TikTok under workers' control!

Nathaniel Flakin

April 6, 2024

China’s Rise, ‘Diminished Dependency,’ and Imperialism in Times of World Disorder

In this broad-ranging interview, originally published in LINKS, Trotskyist Fraction member Esteban Mercatante discusses how recent global shifts in processes of capital accumulation have contributed to China’s rise, the new (and old) mechanisms big powers use to plunder the Global South, and its implications for anti-imperialist and working-class struggles today.

Esteban Mercatante

September 22, 2023

Strike for Wages at Chevron-Australia Could Hit 5 Percent of Global Gas Production

Chevron workers in Western Australia are escalating a strike at two of the world's largest gas facilities. They are demanding wage rises and better working conditions.

Arthur Nicola

September 14, 2023

The Roots of the Rebellion at Foxconn

Jenny Chan is a researcher and professor at the Polytechnic University of Hong Kong. She is co-author of the book Dying for an iPhone. She spoke with La Izquerda Diario about the causes of the rebellion by workers at the Foxconn plant in Zhengzhou, China.

Josefina L. Martínez

December 7, 2022

MOST RECENT

The Student Revolt for Palestine

The student revolt for Palestine in the United States is spreading throughout the world. It is essential that the student movement unites against repression and draws the masses into the fight for a free Palestine.

Jimena Vergara

May 6, 2024

Argentina’s Far-Right President is Once Again Advancing Legislative Attacks on Workers

After a setback in February, Javier Milei, the far-right president of Argentina, is once again pushing a set of laws that would hurt workers. The union bureaucracies and center left parties are containing the ability of the working class to fight back.

Samuel Karlin

May 4, 2024
Two raised fists, one holds pencils and another holds a wrench

Unite All Workers for Democracy Statement Against the Repression of the Palestine Movement

Statement from UAWD, a caucus of the UAW, against the repression of the Palestine movement

UAWD

May 4, 2024
Three Palestine protesters hold a Palestinian flag aloft

Statement From Detroit Will Breathe and Several Other Michigan Groups Against the Repression of the Palestine Movement

Detroit Will Breathe's statement against the repression we've seen unleashed against protesters in the Palestine movement.