In stunning reversal, protests leave Sri Lanka's ruling dynasty
teetering
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[April 06, 2022]
By Devjyot Ghoshal and Uditha Jayasinghe
COLOMBO (Reuters) - In 2020, Mahinda
Rajapaksa won elections to become Sri Lanka's prime minister, serving
under his brother and president Gotabaya. In 2021, another sibling,
Basil, was named finance minister, tightening the family's hold on
power.
Less than a year later, the country's pre-eminent political dynasty is
in trouble, as protesters take to the streets making demands that would
have been unthinkable before the economic crisis struck: that the
president steps down.
"Gota go home!" hundreds of people chanted along a leafy boulevard in
Sri Lanka's commercial capital Colombo this week as cars drove past,
honking their horns in support.
From beachside towns in the south to the Tamil-speaking north, more than
100 demonstrations have broken out across the island nation since last
week, according to the WatchDog research collective.
The unprecedented wave of spontaneous protests reflects people's anger
at spiralling inflation, fuel shortages, power cuts and what they see as
rulers' mismanagement of the crisis that has made it worse.
"Sri Lankans are very, very patient. You've really got to push them into
a corner before they react," said Chantal Cooke, a protester, holding a
banner demanding that the Rajapaksas resign.
Within parliament, too, the family is losing ground.
Basil resigned on Sunday along with other members of the cabinet, and on
Tuesday at least 41 lawmakers walked out of the ruling coalition,
leaving the government with a minority in the 225-member house and
opening up the possibility of a no-confidence motion.
"The more it (the crisis) gets dragged on, the worse it will be for the
Rajapaksa family," said political analyst Kusal Perera, who has written
a book on Mahinda, himself a former president.
The president's office did not immediately respond to a request for
comment on the crisis and on calls for him to resign.
But chief government whip and Highways Minister Johnston Fernando said
Gotabaya, now 72, had been given a mandate to govern by 6.9 million
voters, the number who supported him in presidential elections in 2019.
"As a government, we are clearly saying the president will not resign
under any circumstances," Fernando told parliament on Wednesday. "We
will face this."
NINE SIBLINGS
The fifth of nine siblings born to a political family in Sri Lanka's
Buddhist-dominated south, Nandasena Gotabaya Rajapaksa joined the Sri
Lankan military in 1971 and took part in operations against the Tamil
insurgency during the country's 26-year civil war.
In 2005, years after he retired and emigrated to the United States,
Gotabaya returned to Sri Lanka and joined Mahinda's government as
defence secretary, overseeing the brutal end of a civil war that killed
between 80,000-100,000 people overall.
The United Nations has accused both sides of war crimes during the
conflict, and Gotabaya faced civil prosecution for alleged wartime
atrocities. He has maintained his innocence, and the case was dismissed
due to political immunity.
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Catholic nuns hold placards against Sri Lanka's President Gotabaya
Rajapaksa, after his government lost its majority in the parliament,
amid the country's economic crisis, near the Bishop's house in
Colombo, Sri Lanka, April 5, 2022. REUTERS/Dinuka Liyanawatte
Riding a nationalist wave in the
wake of deadly attacks by Islamist militants earlier that year,
Gotabaya swept to power in 2019 with a landslide mandate.
Months later, the Rajapaksa-led Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna party
crushed the opposition in parliamentary elections, helping his
brother Mahinda become prime minister.
"We will ensure (Sri Lanka) will not stand disappointed during our
tenure," Mahinda said after his victory in 2020. The island nation
was already on the path to crisis by then.
DEBT AND DEMONSTRATIONS
Historically Sri Lanka has had weak finances where expenditure has
exceeded income.
Some critics say that frailty was compounded when Gotabaya enacted
deep tax cuts soon after taking office, only for the COVID-19
pandemic to further decimate the tourism-reliant economy.
Despite vocal appeals from some experts and opposition leaders, the
government declined help from the International Monetary Fund (IMF)
for months, even as the financial crisis worsened, leaving foreign
exchange reserves perilously low.
They stood at around $2.31 billion as of February, while Sri Lanka
faces debt payments of around $4 billion during the rest of this
year.
After a shift in stance, Sri Lanka is due to start talks with the
IMF this month.
In a televised address in mid-March, Gotabaya said he understood the
pain that ordinary Sri Lankans were facing, as imports stalled
because of the lack of foreign exchange and as inflation rocketed.
"I am well aware of the shortages of essential items and increase in
prices," he said. "I am also aware of issues such as gas shortages,
fuel shortage and power cuts."
But he distanced himself from the problems, saying: "This crisis was
not created by me."
For some protesters and opposition politicians, that changes little.
"The red line has been crossed. Public confidence in this government
has dropped to absolute zero," said Udaya Gammanpila, a former
cabinet minister in the Rajapaksa administration.
Back on Colombo's streets, outside a theatre that bears Mahinda
Rajapaksa's name, protester Cooke said the Rajapaksas had to go.
"People are not going to settle for anything other than them all
leaving," she said. "They want all of them out."
(Reporting by Devjyot Ghoshal and Uditha Jayasinghe; Editing by Mike
Collett-White, Nick Macfie and Raju Gopalakrishnan)
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