Sri Lanka frees a thousand prisoners to mark Buddhist holiday
- The pardons on Vesak Day, which commemorates the Buddha’s birth, enlightenment and death, apply only to those convicted of minor offences
- The cash-strapped nation is holding official celebrations for the first time in five years, and events marking the holiday will last a week

Sri Lankan President Ranil Wickremesinghe ordered the early release of nearly 1,000 prisoners to mark the island’s main Buddhist holiday, the prisons chief said on Saturday.
The pardons on Vesak Day, which commemorates the Buddha’s birth, enlightenment and death, applied only to those convicted of minor offences, said Commissioner-General Thushara Upuldeniya.
“We released these inmates from 28 prisons across the country”, Upuldeniya said of the Friday evening releases. “There were 982 men and six women who walked free”.
The cash-strapped South Asian nation is holding official Vesak celebrations for the first time in five years.
Festivities were cancelled in 2019 after Islamic extremists carried out Easter Sunday suicide bombings that claimed 279 lives at churches and hotels in the capital Colombo.