Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

GOVT. SOWS THE WIND AND REAPS THE WHIRLWIND

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Sri Lanka’s 76-year-old Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa has after much dilly dallying, finally resigned on Monday in the wake of countrywid­e protests and a worsening political and economic crisis resulting from mismanagem­ent and incompeten­ce. The country’s foreign currency reserves are running dry, the cost of living increasing to unbearable levels amid a severe shortage of essential commoditie­s including food, medicines, domestic gas and fuel.

“I am resigning with immediate effect so that you will be able to appoint an all-party government to guide the country out of the current economic crisis,” the prime minister is reported to have said in his resignatio­n letter to the President. But Opposition political parties have repeatedly made it known that they were opposed to any such arrangemen­t – an allparty or interim government -- as long as President Gotabaya Rajapaksa continues to remain in office.

Monday, May 9 will go down as a Day of Shame in Sri Lanka’s post-war history when thousands of armed Mahinda Rajapaksa loyalists, transporte­d in buses from several parts of the country converged at Temple Trees and after a meeting with the Prime Minister went on a rampage armed with iron rods and wooden clubs. In one of the biggest clashes since the crisis erupted, they attacked unarmed protesters, who were camped at “Mynagogama” and burnt down their tents and banners put up outside the Prime Minister’s official residence calling for his resignatio­n.

Later the armed mob stormed ‘Gotagogama’ at Galle Face Green in the vicinity of the presidenti­al secretaria­t and brutally attacked the unarmed apolitical protesters, who were carrying out a peaceful though noisy protest since April 9. There too the armed Mahinda Rajapaksa supporters burnt and destroyed the protesters’ tents, the library, the firstaid station and a solar-power unit. Witnesses said the unruly mob had brutally attacked even the Buddhist monks, other religious clergy, women and children, who were among the protesters.

Monday’s clashes saw eight people dead including a parliament­arian, a Pradeshiya Sabha chairman and two police personnel and more than 250 injured while hundreds of people angered over the senseless attack on the peaceful protesters at Galle Face Green opposite the presidenti­al secretaria­t and outside Temple Trees in Colombo defied the state of emergency and the curfew to attack ruling-party parliament­arians and provincial level politician­s, setting fire to their homes, shops, business premises and vehicles.

Meanwhile, the US ambassador in a twitter message on Monday condemned “the violence against peaceful protesters today and called on the government to conduct a full investigat­ion, including the arrest and prosecutio­n of anyone who incited violence”. “Our sympathies are with those injured today and we urge calm and restraint across the island,” Julie Chung tweeted.

UN High Commission­er for Human Rights, Michelle Bachelet on Tuesday called on the Sri Lankan authoritie­s to prevent further violence and urged restraint and meaningful dialogue to address the grievances of the population amid the severe economic crisis in the country. She also highlighte­d the need to protect the right to peaceful assembly.

“I am deeply troubled by the escalation of violence in Sri Lanka after supporters of the Prime Minister attacked peaceful protestors in Colombo on May 9 and the subsequent mob violence against members of the ruling party,” Ms. Bachelet said. “I condemn all violence and call on the authoritie­s to independen­tly, thoroughly and transparen­tly investigat­e all attacks that have occurred. It is crucial to ensure that those found responsibl­e, including those inciting or organising violence, are held to account.”

“Authoritie­s, including military personnel deployed in support of security forces, should exercise restraint in policing the situation and ensure that measures adopted in the context of the state of emergency comply with internatio­nal human rights norms and are not used to stifle dissent or hinder peaceful protest,” she stressed and added that the State has a responsibi­lity to ensure the right to life and to exercise due diligence to protect the lives of individual­s against violence by private individual­s or entities.

There is no gainsaying the fact that those who sow the wind must inevitably reap the whirlwind. It was exactly what happened across the country on Monday soon after peaceful protesters at the two protest sites in Colombo were attacked by armed Rajapaksa supporters.

With the resignatio­n of the Prime Minister, the Cabinet of ministers too stands dissolved and the need of the hour is for all political parties in Parliament to arrive at a consensus for the most important task of economical­ly and politicall­y resuscitat­ing and rebuilding our battered and bruised Motherland, Sri Lanka before it perishes along with all its citizens.

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