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Sri Lanka economy slowly recovering from Easter attacks: IMF

Sri Lanka's economy was slowly recovering from the impact of the Easter Sunday suicide bombings that killed hundreds and crippled the booming tourism sector, the International Monetary Fund said Saturday.

Growth was likely to hit 3.5 percent next year from this year's forecast of 2.7 percent, the Washington-based lender said, compared to 3.2 percent in 2018.


The country estimates it will lose about $1.5 billion in tourism revenue this year as a result of a sharp dip in arrivals following the jihadist attacks on churches and hotels, which killed at least 269 people.

"The authorities are taking actions to mitigate the revenue shortfalls caused by the terrorist attacks and preserve the hard-won gains made under the program," said IMF deputy managing director Mitsuhiro Furusawa in a statement.

Furusawa's comments coincided with the latest tranche of a $1.5 billion IMF bailout package for Sri Lanka first approved in 2016.

He warned that Sri Lanka would need to maintain fiscal discipline in order to rein in public debt, while acknowledging the need for urgent social and investment spending.

Sri Lanka votes in presidential polls on November 16 and parliamentary elections next year, raising fears of welfare spending at the cost of a budget black hole.

Official figures show that Sri Lanka will have to repay a record $5.9 billion in foreign loans this year.

(AFP)

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UK moves to ban DeepNude-style AI ‘nudification’ apps in online abuse crackdown

Creating explicit deepfake images of someone without their consent is already a criminal offence

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UK moves to ban DeepNude-style AI ‘nudification’ apps in online abuse crackdown

Highlights

  • Government plans to ban AI tools that digitally remove clothing from images
  • New offences target the creation and supply of nudification apps
  • Measures form part of a wider strategy to cut violence against women and girls

Ban targets AI-powered image abuse

The UK government says it will ban so-called “nudification” apps, describing them as tools that fuel misogyny and online abuse. The announcement is made on Thursday as part of a broader plan to halve violence against women and girls.

Under the proposed laws, it will become illegal to create or supply artificial intelligence tools that allow users to edit images to make it appear as though a person’s clothing has been removed. The government says the offences will strengthen existing rules on sexually explicit deepfakes and intimate image abuse.

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