Calls grow in Sri Lanka for Rajapaksas to quit
Sri Lanka’s opposition on Monday dismissed the president’s invitation to join a unity government as “nonsensical” and instead demanded he resign over the country’s worsening shortages of food, fuel and medicines.
President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s overture came as armed troops looked to quell more demonstrations over what the government acknowledges is the country’s most severe economic crisis since independence from Britain in 1948.
Police fired tear gas and water cannon to disperse thousands of protesters trying to storm the private home of the prime minister - the president’s elder brother and the head of the family political clan - in Tangalle, once a bastion of support for the Rajapaksas in the island’s south.
The president asked opposition parties represented in parliament to “join the effort to seek solutions to the national crisis,” after the late-night resignation of nearly all cabinet ministers to pave the way for a revamped administration.
“We will not be joining this government,” Eran Wickramaratne of the main opposition Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) party told AFP. “The Rajapaksa family must step down.”
It capped a day of rejections from political parties demanding the once popular and powerful ruling family relinquish power.
“He really must be a lunatic to think that opposition MPS will prop up a government that is crumbling,” lawmaker Anura Dissanayake of the leftist People’s Liberation Front (JVP) told reporters in the capital Colombo.
Every member of Sri Lanka’s cabinet except the president and his elder brother, Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa, resigned late Sunday.
The country’s central bank governor Ajith Cabraal - who has long opposed the International Monetary Fund bailout now being sought by the country also stepped down on Monday.
A day after en masse resignations, the president reappointed four of the outgoing ministers -three of them to their old jobs -while replacing brother Basil Rajapaksa as finance minister with the previous justice chief.
A critical lack of foreign currency has left Sri Lanka struggling to service its ballooning $51-billion foreign debt. The result has seen unprecedented food and fuel shortages along with record inflation and crippling power cuts.
Cricketers Mahela Jayawardene and Kumar Sangakkara also called on the government to listen to the people and keep their “political agendas” aside.