Sri Lankan PM resigns amid island nation’s worst economic crisis

Consumers in long lines to buy cooking gas use their empty cylinders to block a main intersectional road in Colombo, Sri Lanka, on May 8, 2022. (AFP)
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  • Embattled Mahinda Rajapaksa had initially resisted calls to step down
  • Violent clashes erupted Monday reportedly wounding at least 138 people

COLOMBO: Sri Lanka’s Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa resigned on Monday, a government official said, amid the island nation’s worst economic crisis since independence from British rule in 1948.
The South Asian country is on the brink of bankruptcy and has suspended payments on its foreign loans. Sri Lankans, suffering from months of blackouts and dire shortages of essential items such as food and fuel, have been taking to the streets in largely peaceful protests demanding the government steps down.
On Monday, however, violent clashes erupted in Colombo between supporters of Sri Lanka’s ruling party and anti-government protesters, with police firing tear gas and water cannons to drive back the demonstrators.
“Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa tendered his resignation from the premiership to the president in the afternoon on Monday,” Rohan Wellivita, media secretary to the prime minister, told Arab News.
In a copy of his resignation letter seen by Arab News, Rajapaksa said his government was not “solely responsible” for the economic crisis, and problems had been brewing since the country’s independence and were “aggravated” due to the COVID pandemic.
“I am prepared to sacrifice my post for the betterment of the nation,” the letter read, adding that Rajapaksa was quitting to help form an interim, unity government.
The premier’s resignation, after which the entire cabinet stands dissolved, came after a day of chaos and violence that culminated in authorities imposing a nationwide curfew and deploying armed troops in the capital. At least 138 people were wounded in the violence, according to reports.
Until recently, President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and his ruling family had resisted calls to resign, with the government also facing a no-confidence motion in parliament. The president is the prime minister’s younger brother.
As anti-government protests continued to escalate, the president declared a state of emergency on Friday, giving sweeping detention powers to the military and allowing him to make laws without parliamentary approval.
Hit hard by the pandemic and rising oil prices, Sri Lanka had announced earlier this month that it was defaulting on its $51 billion foreign debt. Finance Minister Ali Sabry said last week that the country’s usable foreign reserves had plummeted below $50 million.
The government is in talks with the International Monetary Fund for a bailout, and is set to continue discussions in a virtual summit with IMF officials this week aimed at securing emergency assistance.