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Ermiza Tegal

Ermiza Tegal is a lawyer and researcher. For 17 years she has practiced in the spheres of public law fundamental rights, land, labor,...

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Balasingham Skanthakumar

Balasingham Skanthakumar is an editor of Polity magazine and co-convenor of the ‘Critical Agrarian Studies’ seminar at the Social Scientists’ Association (SSA) in...

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Vidura Munasinghe

Vidura Munasinghe is an Attorney-at-Law, Researcher, and activist. Currently, he is a senior researcher at the Law and Society Trust. His research interests...

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Sakuna M Gamage

Sakuna M Gamage is a researcher and Coordinator at the Law and Society Trust in Sri Lanka. He holds a Bachelor of Arts...

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Shafiya Roshan Rafaithu

Shafiya Roshan Rafaithu is an independent researcher with a BA (Hons) in Psychology from the University of Peradeniya. Her research has involved women...

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Yathursha Ulakentheran

Yathursha Ulakentheran is an independent researcher in Northern Sri Lanka with a BA (Hons) in English from the University of Peradeniya, Sri Lanka....

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Suganya Kandeepan

Suganya Kandeepan is a Research officer at the Northern Cooperative Development Bank. Over the past few years, she has worked on various research...

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Madhulika Gunawardena

Madhulika Gunawardena is a feminist researcher working on public debt, austerity, political economy, women’s labor, and social protection. She is the Advocacy Coordinator...

Debt Justice
Publications

Debt Justice

A PLATFORM FOR WORKING PEOPLE IN  SRI LAKA’S ECONOMIC CRISIS On 13th May 2024, researchers, activists, civil society organizations, trade unions, and community leaders came together to launch a platform called YUKTHI. At an event in Colombo, titled “FROM DISPOSSESSION TO DEVELOPMENT: SRI LANKA’S PATH TO DEBT JUSTICE,”  YUKTHI was launched as a plural forum to support working people’s movements and struggles for democracy and justice in Sri Lanka. This alliance aims to promote better understanding of working people’s experiences, and critical analysis, and alternatives to neoliberalism, in Sri Lanka’s ongoing economic crisis. As Sri Lanka has only postponed its unbearable repayment of private andbilateral debt (with interest) to 2027; and is predicted to default onits foreign debt in the near future, leading to yet another IMFausterity programme, YUKTHI seeks to build a broad movement for debtjustice in Sri Lanka. It argues that the government’s debtrestructuring plans in the context of the IMF programme is no cure forSri Lanka’s sick political economy; and only attacks thesocio-economic rights of the working people while redistributing theirfew remaining assets and resources to the ruling elite. Dr. Ahilan Kadirgamar, of the University of Jaffna, and  MadhulikaGunawardana of the Feminist Collective for Economic Justice (FCEJ)unpacked the debt crisis and its impacts on working people, even asthere is no end to their socio-economic crisis. Dr. Amali Wedagedara ofthe Committee for the Abolition of Illegitimate Debt (CADTM) explainedwhy current negotiations with private creditors are unfavorable to SriLanka, and the significance of a public audit of Sri Lanka’s debt.Thispanel was moderated by Balasingham Skanthakumar of the SocialScientists’ Association. This was followed by activists explaining how the debt crisis and theresponses of the Government of Sri Lanka and the IMF are no solution tothe problems of working people. Annalingam Annarasa, fisher leader fromKayts, described the worsening situation of small-scale fishers in theNorthern Province. Colombo Urban Lab founder Iromi Perera clarified theconnections between rollbacks in social protection and the stress on theurban working poor. Young Researchers Network  member R. Babyshalinispoke of how plantation communities are hurting from IMF imposedconditionalities. With land reforms underway, Vidura Prabath Munasingheof Law & Society Trust shared research findings on how restrictions onaccess to land will undermine the wellbeing of the rural poor.Peradeniya Professor Shamala Kumar of the Kuppi Collective analyzedreductions in state expenditure on free education and why privatizationis part of the problem. Lawyer Ermiza Tegal closed the panel with areminder on the political repression of new laws and proposed laws toenforce submission to the IMF programme. This session was moderated byMelani Gunathilaka of Climate Action Now Sri Lanka and YathurshaUlakentheran of Young Researchers’ Network. YUKTHI’s website [1] with resources on the structural roots of SriLanka’s economic crisis and documenting how the costs of the crisisare being shouldered by its victims rather than the ruling elite whoengineered it, went live during the event.