Sri Lankan Education Minister Susil Premajayanta on Sunday urged public schools across the country to switch to online education amid worsening fuel shortages that have left many Sri Lankans unable to get their children to school, according to a Sri Lankan news website. Ada Derana.
“The Minister has asked all teachers and principals to implement an online learning system for students in schools to be closed,” Ada Derana said, referring to Premajayanta on June 19. Said.
Some public schools in the capital, Colombo, and other major cities in the country will be closed from at least June 20-24 due to fuel shortages in the country, Sri Lanka’s education minister announced on Sunday.
Sri Lanka’s Ministry of Education has granted provincial education authorities “allowance to attend pre-classes in schools where students, teachers and principals are not affected by transportation problems”. Ada Derana Linggo.
In recent months, blackouts continue due to fuel shortages in Sri Lanka. The situation calls into question the ability of students to attend online classes that require constant access to electricity.
The Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka on the coast of Southern India has been experiencing a devastating economic crisis since the beginning of March. Sri Lanka has faced severe shortages of fuel, food and medical supplies this year, after depleting its foreign exchange reserves used to buy vital imports. For the past three months, Sri Lankans have regularly lined up for fuel and fuel as per government regulations. At least ten people died while waiting in line, most of them from heatstroke, and at least one was reportedly “killed” while quarreling with other desperate queues in late March.
Over the weekend, Sri Lankan army soldiers opened fire twice at people surrounding gas stations. The first incident occurred in the northern Sri Lankan town of Mullaitivu on June 18, after police tried to arrest a man for “interfering” with an Army fuel line control.
“Then, a group of people gathered near an army checkpoint and demanding the release of a suspect, hindered the officers’ mission and attacked them with glass bottles,” News First reported on its website. They came to the scene, checked the situation and opened fire in the air. Police reported that 7 people, including 3 soldiers, were injured in the incident.
The second incident occurred on June 19 in the city of Kalutara in southeastern Sri Lanka.
“The military issued warnings yesterday at a gas station in Kalutara’s Migahathenna district to ease the tense situation,” Sri Lankan police said. Daily Mirror Newspaper report. Tensions rose after a man tried to cut the gas pipeline. “The soldiers on duty opened fire in the air to disperse the people,” he said.
Source: Breitbart