Gulf Today

Lanka whisks ex-pm to naval base as troops patrol streets

I urge all Lankans to reject the subversive atempts to push you towards racial and religious disharmony. Promoting moderation, toleration and coexistenc­e is vital, said President on Twiter

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Sri Lanka has moved Mahinda Rajapaksa to a naval base for his safety ater he quit two days ago as prime minister, the defence secretary said on Wednesday, following violence targeting the family for its role in the country’s worst economic crisis.

Sri Lankans blame the Rajapaksa dynasty for a meltdown in the Indian Ocean nation that reduced reserves to just about $50 million, stalling most imports and bringing massive shortages of key items of food, fuel, medicine, unleashing protests.

“The prime minister was evacuated to the Trincomale­e naval base for security reasons,” Kamal Gunaratne told a news conference, referring to the base on the northeaste­rn coast.

“He will remain there for the next couple of days and when the situation is normalised, he can be moved to a location of his choice.”

Wednesday’s move comes ater protesters set ablaze this week a museum in the family’s ancestral base in the south that had been dedicated to their father, leaving it in ruins, with exhibits smashed or looted.

Police and soldiers patrolled the streets of Weeraketiy­a, the town that is home to the Rajapaksas, where shops and businesses were shut by a curfew set to run until Thursday morning.

Rajapaksa’s younger brother continues as president despite street clashes this week, triggered by massive shortages of essentials, that killed nine people.

With the army deployed to keep the peace and troops ordered to shoot at anyone damaging public property or threatenin­g lives, soldiers in armoured vehicles patrolled the streets of Colombo, the commercial capital.

“This is the time for all Sri Lankans to join hands as one, to overcome the economic, social and political challenges,” President Gotabaya Rajapaksa said on Twiter.

“I urge all Sri Lankans to reject the subversive atempts to push you towards racial and religious disharmony. Promoting moderation, toleration and coexistenc­e is vital.”

It was not immediatel­y clear what prompted his warning, but Sri Lanka has a long and bloody history of ethnic tension, with Sinhalese Buddhists forming the bulk of population of 22 million sprinkled with Muslim, Hindu and Christian minorities.

The two Rajapaksas held key government positions when a 26-year civil war ended in 2009 ater security forces overcame militants from the minority Tamil community.

At least five members of the family held ministeria­l positions until recently.

Analysts say the president can be impeached if he refuses to step down, though the opposition, which has rejected his calls for a unity government, lacks the necessary two-thirds majority in parliament.

No president has ever been successful­ly impeached and removed from office in Sri Lanka.

The situation ater the prime minister’s resignatio­n could complicate negotiatio­ns for foreign aid.

Sri Lanka has sought urgent loans from the Internatio­nal Monetary Fund (IMF), following financial and other support from neighbour India as well as China, as the violence has further dented a tourism-dependent economy hammered by COVID-19.

The IMF expressed concern about the violence, but said it would continue technical talks begun on Monday with Sri Lankan officials “so as to be fully prepared for policy discussion­s once a new government has been formed.”

The president plans to meet opposition politician­s within days in hopes of forming a new government, a cabinet spokespers­on said on Tuesday.

Parliament speaker Mahinda Yapa Abeywarden­a is set to hold meetings online with lawmakers on Wednesday to discuss the way forward.

The central bank chief has threatened to resign unless political parties ensure stability within the next two weeks, saying steps to revive the economy would not succeed in the absence of a political solution to the crisis.

Four people were wounded in the town of Rathgama in one of two shooting incidents on Tuesday night, said police spokesman Nalin Thalduwa, adding, “The situation is now calm.”

 ?? Agence France-presse ?? ↑
Soldiers check documents of a driver at a road checkpoint in Colombo on Wednesday.
Agence France-presse ↑ Soldiers check documents of a driver at a road checkpoint in Colombo on Wednesday.

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