Authorities cancel visa of Scotswoman who documented anti-government protests
COLOMBO – Sri Lanka’s Department of Immigration and Emigration has cancelled the visa of Kayleigh Fraser, a Scotswoman who had been documenting the country’s anti-government protests on social media.
Immigration officers had approached Fraser at her home on August 2 and confiscated her passport.
“This is what will happen if you raise your voice against state violence in Sri Lanka,” Fraser wrote on Wednesday (10), posting a letter ordering her to leave the country by August 15.
“I am proud to have been a part of this. I am proud to have met so many of you. I have… so many social enterprises I want to work on here that I know will benefit so many,” Fraser said on Instagram.
“Deporting me is a massive, massive mistake for this country. The love I have for it and its people appears to be a threat to the current rulers. Does that sound right to you?”
Fraser posted that she was not prepared for the financial cost of flights and relocation, and that all her funds were in Sri Lankan currency, and that banks were not allowing foreign transactions.
Police spokesperson Nihal Thalduwa had told a privately owned news organization that Fraser was sharing “negative content” about Sri Lanka via her social media.
“It is not right for a foreign national to be in our country and share such mass negative content. She is not a media personnel either, to cover the protests and GotaGoGama,” he has said.
Fraser has been vocal about state sanctioned violence against protesters.
News of Fraser’s deportation has caused a small riot on social media, with many protesters voicing out their support for the foreigner who documented and showed support next to them.
Seemingly indiscriminate arrests aided by an ongoing State of Emergency have both angered and frightened Sri Lankan protesters, and many active participants have gone into hiding to evade arrest.
Some protesters said they were “taking a break” or “distancing themselves” due to continued harassment.
However, the authorities maintain that all arrests are in accordance with the law. The government has pointed to acts of retaliatory mob violence on May 9 and the forced occupation of government buildings by protestors on July 9.
“They are calling us terrorists for holding placards. This was such a peaceful protest, the only terrorism carried out was by the government against the people,” said an active protester, who preferred not to be named.
Fraser wrote that Sri Lankans should not forget that they got to the streets for a system change.
“Live in such a way that your children will thank you for the world they inherit,” she said.
“It’s not over till it’s over. I have an unbelievable amount of high profile people fighting this order for me to leave.”
-economynext.com
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