Minister blames monkey for Sri Lanka nationwide power cut

Fruit stalls are seen in Kirimandala Market during a power cut in Colombo, Sri Lanka, on 12 April 2022.Image source, Getty Images
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Sri Lanka experienced widespread blackouts amid an economic crisis in 2022

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A nationwide blackout in Sri Lanka has been blamed on a monkey that intruded into a power station south of Colombo.

Power is gradually being restored across the island nation of 22 million people, with medical facilities and water purification plants being given priority.

"A monkey has come in contact with our grid transformer, causing an imbalance in the system," Energy Minister Kumara Jayakody told reporters.

The blackout started at about 11:00 local time (05:30 GMT) on Sunday, forcing many to rely on generators. Officials said it may take a few hours to get power back.

On social media, people criticised the authorities while making fun of the incident.

"A rogue monkey knocked out Sri Lanka's entire power grid after triggering a total failure at a substation in Colombo," X user Mario Nawfal wrote.

"One monkey = total chaos. Time to rethink infrastructure?" he added.

Another X user, Sreeni R, posted an illustration of the monkey god Hanuman, who according to the Hindu epic Ramayana, set Sri Lanka on fire during a war with the demon king Ravana who ruled the country.

"Sri Lanka tasted monkey business in the past," he wrote.

"Only in Sri Lanka can a group of monkeys fighting inside a power station cause an islandwide power outage," wrote Jamila Husain, editor-in-chief of local newspaper Daily Mirror.

In a report published on Monday, the newspaper said engineers have been warning consecutive governments "for years" to upgrade its power grid or face frequent blackouts.

"The national power grid is in such a weakened state that frequent islandwide power outages maybe expected if there is a disturbance even in one of our lines," it quoted an unnamed senior engineer saying.

Sri Lanka experienced widespread blackouts during its economic crisis in 2022.

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