Army Evacuates Former Sri Lankan PM From Besieged Residence

Mahinda Rajapaksa and his family taken to safety by heavily armed soldiers as anti-government protesters storm gates.

Army Evacuates Former Sri Lankan PM From Besieged Residence
Police stand guard outside the president's office amid worsening violence in Sri Lanka after weeks of anti-government protests

 

 

Heavily armed troops have also evacuated outgoing Sri Lankan Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa from his official residence in the Colombo after thousands of protesters breached the main gate in the worst violence in weeks of protests over an unprecedented economic crisis. Protesters who forced their way into the

 

prime minister’s official Temple Trees residence then attempted to storm the main two-storey building on the Tuesday where Rajapaksa was then holed up with his immediate family. After a pre-dawn operation, the former PM and his family were evacuated to safety by the army, a top security official told the media. At least 10 petrol

 

 

bombs were thrown into the compound. Rajapaksa’s evacuation to an undisclosed location followed a day of violent protests in which five people, including a member of parliament, were killed and nearly 200 wounded, and marks a sudden fall from grace for the man who has dominated Sri Lankan politics for nearly 20 years. The

 

 

security official said police kept up a barrage of tear gas and fired warning shots in the air to hold back protesters at all three entrances to the colonial-era building, a key symbol of state power.

 

 

Anti-government demonstrators set dozens of properties linked to government ministers and the Rajapaksas on fire after ruling party supporters stormed a peaceful protest camp in the centre of Colombo

 

 

Elsewhere, dozens of properties linked to top Rajapaksa loyalists were torched and mobs attacked controversial Rajapaksa museum in the family’s ancestral village in the island’s south, razing it to the ground, police said. Two wax statues of the Rajapaksa parents were flattened. The Rajapaksa clan’s hold on power has been shaken by

 

 

months of blackouts and shortages in Sri Lanka, the worst economic crisis since it became independent in 1948. The sudden surge in violence comes despite a curfew and a state of emergency that was imposed on Friday. The emergency order from President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, the outgoing premier’s younger brother, gives

 

 

sweeping powers to the military amid vocal demands for him to step down over the country’s deepening economic crisis. Protesters and Sri Lankan religious leaders have blamed the former prime minister for instigating the family’s supporters to attack unarmed protesters on Monday and fuelling the violence.

 

 

Sri Lanka’s ruling party supporters are seen in Beira Lake after they jumped in there to protect themselves from anti-government demonstrators in Colombo

 

 

Curfew after deadly unrest

Sri Lankan authorities deployed thousands of troops and police on Tuesday to also enforce a nationwide curfew. Streets were calm on Tuesday in the commercial capital of the Colombo also following a day of deadly unrest. The situation is calmer now, though there are still reports of sporadic unrest, said the Police spokesman Nihal

 

 

Thalduwa. No arrests have yet been made in the isolated incidents of violence, he said, adding that three of the five deaths had been from gunshot injuries. Authorities also said that the curfew will also be lifted Wednesday morning, with government and private offices, as well as shops and schools, ordered to remain shut on Tuesday.

 

 

US Ambassador Julie Chung tweeted that Washington condemned the violence against peaceful protestors and called on the Sri Lankan government to conduct a full investigation, including the arrest & prosecution of anyone who incited violence.