The speaker of Sri Lanka’s parliament has accepted a resignation letter from President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, which the embattled leader sent after fleeing to Singapore.
“From this point, we will move to constitutionally appoint a new president,” the speaker, Mahinda Yapa Abeywardena, said on Friday.
He added Parliament would meet on Saturday to begin the process of picking a new president who would serve out the remainder of Rajapaksa’s term ending in 2024. Abeywardana said he expected the process to be done in seven days.
The announcement that a letter had been handed in on Thursday had triggered jubilation in the commercial capital, Colombo, where protesters massed outside the presidential secretariat defying a city-wide curfew.
Crowds set off firecrackers, shouted slogans and danced ecstatically at the Gota Go Gama protest site, named mockingly after Rajapaksa’s first name.
“The whole country will celebrate today,” Damitha Abeyrathne, an activist, said. “It’s a big victory.”
“We never thought we would get this country free from them,” she added, referring to the Rajapaksa family who dominated the country’s politics for 20 years.
Rajapaksa landed in Singapore on Thursday after fleeing mass protests over his country’s economic meltdown. He travelled on to Singapore on a Saudia airline flight, according to reports.
Rajapaksa was with his wife Ioma and their two bodyguards. A passenger on the flight, who declined to be named, told Reuters news agency that Rajapaksa was met by a group of security guards and was seen leaving the airport VIP area in a convoy of black vehicles.
Airline staff on the flight told Reuters the president dressed in black and flew business class, describing him as “quiet” and “friendly”.
Singapore’s foreign ministry confirmed Rajapaksa had been allowed to enter the city-state, but insisted it was for a “private visit”.
“He has not asked for asylum and neither has he been granted any asylum. Singapore generally does not grant requests for asylum,” it said in a statement.
A handful of Sri Lankans were waiting in one of the airport’s arrival areas to voice their anger at Rajapaksa and the economic crisis engulfing their homeland.
“I want to scold him with all the words that I know,” said a Sri Lankan design engineer working in Singapore, who identified himself only as Max.
“He’s responsible for everything that happened in our country,” he told AFP news agency. The city-state is home to a sizeable Sri Lankan diaspora.
But authorities were quick to warn against protests: it is illegal for even one person to stage a demonstration in tightly controlled Singapore without prior official permission.
In a statement issued after Rajapaksa’s arrival, police urged people to “abide by our local laws” and said “action will be taken against anyone participating in a public assembly that is illegal”.
Source: Aljazeera