While India
has been wary of joining the US led naval coalition in the Gulf to take on the
fire power of Houthi rebels, its neighbor Sri lanka has jumped the bandwagon
and expressed its willingness to join the American effort. India’s reluctance
to join the US led coalition is attributed to not wanting to antagonize Gulf
countries who sympathize with the Palestinian cause according to sources
Sri Lankan Navy is gearing up to
participate in a US-led mission safeguarding merchant vessels in the Red Sea
from Houthi rebel attacks, according to
an international news agency quoting a spokesperson for the Sri Lankan navy..
Captain
GayanWickramasuriya, the navy spokesperson, told an international news
agency that no specific date has been set for the dispatch of Sri Lankan
ships, and the exact patrol area is yet to be finalised. The decision to send the ships drew criticism from opposition lawmakers
in the island nation.
Opposition
leader SajithPremadasa blamed the government for spending Rs 250 million to send ships to fight Houthi rebels in the
Red Sea when Sri Lankans are experiencing severe economic hardships at home.
State Minister of Defense PramithaTennakoon defended the move, saying the
government wants to fulfill its “global responsibilities†and noting that “Sri
Lanka is against any form of terrorism
Sri Lanka
would incur no additional costs by joining the operations, as the country’s
ships are already patrolling its vast maritime area in the Indian Ocean, he
said
Joining the US
led coalition could help the debt ridden Sri Lanka get further assistance from
International Monetary fund, the island nation’s government believes. Sri Lanka
is struggling to get through the worst economic crisis in its history. The
country declared bankruptcy in April 2022 with more than $83 billion in debt —
more than half of it to foreign creditors. Its economy was plunged into crisis,
with severe shortages of food, fuel and other necessities. Sri Lanka hopes to
restructure 17 billion of its tens of billions of outstanding debt.
IMF has agreed
in March last year to a 2.9-billion US dollars bailout package.Over the past
year, severe shortages of essentials like food, fuel and medicine have largely
abated, and authorities have restored power supplies. But public dissatisfaction has grown over the government’s efforts to
increase revenues by raising electricity bills and imposing heavy new income
taxes on professionals and businesses.