Rajapaksa officially resigns giving way to election of new president

COLOMBO (Parliament Politics Magazine) – The parliamentary speaker announced that Gotabaya Rajapaksa, the embattled president of Sri Lanka, has resigned officially following a dramatic week that saw him flee the nation after demonstrators ransacked his offices and presidential residence.

Mahinda Yapa Abeywardena, the speaker,  officially declared that Rajapaksa had resigned in a broadcast speech on Friday morning.

Rajapaksa is presently in Singapore where he ran to via Maldives on Wednesday. The formal announcement of the resignation was postponed until Friday while the speakers’ office validated the letter, which was sent late on Thursday night first by email and then the original via diplomatic flight.

Sri Lanka was in political uncertainty for over 36 hours as a result of Rdajapaksa’s decision to leave without giving a resignation, and tensions were high in the nation, which was still under an emergency declaration.

Ranil Wickremesinghe, the prime minister, will be sworn in as an interim president on Friday, according to the constitution, and will maintain the position until a new vote is held by MPs in parliament next week. This was confirmed by Abeywardena. The speaker said that the procedure for electing and confirming a new president would likely take seven days.

Abeywardena asked all political party leaders to “extend their support” and “uphold democracy” during the transition in order to ensure a smooth selection of the new president.

In order to start the process of establishing a new all-party “unity” administration made up of numerous political groups, Parliament will now reassemble on Saturday. The major opposition party’s leader, Sajith Premadasa, is expected to be the candidate put out by the opposition parties at their meeting this morning.

Rajapaksa’s resignation as president comes after months of steadfast demonstrations demanding that he do so. Six members of his politically influential family, including Mahinda Rajapaksa, who served as prime minister, and Basil Rajapaksa, who served as finance minister, had ruled alongside him. However, the president had clung to power much longer than his family members who had all been forced to quit in recent months due to public pressure.

The biggest economic crisis Sri Lanka has experienced since gaining independence in 1948, which resulted in serious shortages of fuel, food, and medications, is widely attributed to Rajapaksa. He is charged with systemic corruption and financial mismanagement, along with many members of his wealthy family who held political posts.

Since being removed from his residence on Saturday morning, when tens of thousands of people gathered in Colombo to demand his resignation, Rajapaksa has not addressed the people of Sri Lanka directly.

To allow a “peaceful transition of power,” he had agreed to relinquish control on July 13; nevertheless, the date had passed with no trace of his letter of resignation. While in office, Rajapaksa enjoys immunity from arrest, and many people thought he was seeking for a safe haven nation before stepping down from the presidency to shield himself from prosecution for long-standing allegations of corruption and war crimes.

Rajapaksa has not applied for refuge in Singapore, according to the government there. His last whereabouts are still unknown.