Times-Herald

Sri Lankan prime minister resigns after protests

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COLOMBO, Sri Lanka (AP) — Sri Lankan Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa resigned Monday following weeks of protests demanding that he and his brother, the president, step down for dragging the country into its worst economic crisis in decades.

Rajapaksa said on Twitter that he submitted his resignatio­n to President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, a move that followed a violent attack by government supporters on the protesters, prompting authoritie­s to deploy armed troops in the capital, Colombo. There was no immediate comment from the president's office.

For more than a month, protests have spread across the country, drawing people across ethnicitie­s, religions and class. For the first time middle-class Sri Lankans also took to the streets in large numbers, marking a dramatic revolt by many former Rajapaksa supporters, some of whom have spent weeks protesting outside the president's office.

The protests have sparked a political reckoning, with the government facing a noconfiden­ce motion in Parliament, and underscore­d a dramatic fall from favor of the Rajapaksas, Sri Lanka's most powerful political dynasty for decades. The brothers were once hailed as heroes by many of the island's BuddhistSi­nhalese majority for ending the country's 30-year civil war, and despite accusation­s of war atrocities, the two were firmly entrenched at the top of Sri Lankan politics until now.

The prime minister's resignatio­n comes as the country's economy has swiftly unraveled in recent weeks, causing extraordin­ary pain to Sri Lankans. Imports of everything from milk to fuel have plunged, spawning dire food shortages and rolling power cuts.

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