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Bangkok Post
Bangkok Post
World

Sri Lankan president flees to Maldives

A woman gestures in defiance as she sits inside the Prime Minister's official residence in Colombo, Sri Lanka, which was stormed by protesters over the weekend. The president fled the country on Wednesday. (Photo: Reuters)

COLOMBO: Sri Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa fled the country on Wednesday, a government official said, just days after protesters stormed the president's official residence as the island country grapples with its worst economic crisis since independence.

The president, who was due to resign on Wednesday, boarded a military transport plane with his wife and others and flew to the Maldives in the Indian Ocean, the official said, drawing to a close the years-long rule by the Rajapaksa family.

Rajapaksa has already signed a resignation letter dated Wednesday, according to local media. The speaker of parliament is expected to announce the resignation on Wednesday, with the selection of a new president planned for July 20.

Last Saturday, several thousand demonstrators entered the president's official residence in the country's largest city Colombo and seized the compound, demanding he step down. The protesters managed to enter the residence despite police attempts to stop them by using tear gas and water cannons.

Rajapaksa tried unsuccessfully to leave for Dubai in the United Arab Emirates on Monday. His attempt was thwarted at immigration. There is speculation he feared losing immunity from arrest after he is no longer president.

In April, Sri Lanka said it would default on its external public debt pending a bailout package from the International Monetary Fund due to critically low foreign exchange reserves. It was the first debt default announced by the country of 22 million people since it gained independence from Britain in 1948.

Sri Lankan citizens are experiencing a severe lack of fuel, which is mostly imported. Long queues have formed at gas stations in Colombo, with very few cars seen driving on well-maintained toll roads. The Rajapaksas have ruled the South Asian country for much of the last two decades, with the president's elder brother, Mahinda Rajapaksa, serving previously as president and prime minister.

When his younger brother was elected president in 2019, Mahinda Rajapaksa became prime minister again. But he was forced to step down on May 9 after growing public discontent with the Rajapaksa family's rule amid economic difficulties. 

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