President Gotabaya Rajapaksa will not resign: Sri Lanka Govt

07 Apr 2022 07:38:58
 
President Gotabaya Rajapaksa
 
 
COLOMBO,
 
SRI LANKAN Government on Wednesday said that President Gotabaya Rajapaksa will not resign under any circumstances and will face the current issues, as it defended the embattled leader’s decision to enforce a state of emergency, which he later revoked after huge public protests demanded his resignation over the country’s worst economic crisis. Speaking in Parliament, Chief Government Whip Minister Johnston Fernando said the Government will face this problem and
there is no reason for the President to resign as he was elected to office.
Claiming that the Opposition Janatha Vimukthi Peramunawas (JVP) party was behind the violence in the country, Fernando said that this “thug politics” should not be allowed and called on the people to end the violence.
He said that the Government will continue to work to address the issues faced by the public at present, the Colombo Page portal reported. The Government also defended the President’s decision to enforce a state of emergency, that had given him sweeping authority to act in the interests of public security and preserving public order, including suspending any laws, authorising detentions and seizing property, saying it was declared after attempts were made to attack the President’s Office and other public property.
Rajapaksa had declared the emergency last week after protesters demonstrated near his home in Colombo. The protests
initially began over shortages of essentials such as cooking gas, petrol, electricity and milk powder, but now have spread across the island nation and the demonstrators are demanding the resignation of Rajapaksa and his Government.
The President late Tuesday night revoked the emergency after huge public protests demanded his resignation.
The President and his older brother, Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa, continue to hold power in Sri Lanka, despite their politically powerful family being the focus of public ire.
On Tuesday, a verbal clash took place in Parliament between ruling party and Opposition members when they held a debate over the current crisis in Sri Lanka.
Speaker Mahinda Yapa Abeywardena was forced to suspend sittings twice as a result of a heated situation which arose in Parliament.
The main Opposition Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) also held placards in Parliament during the debate.
The Opposition questioned the state of emergency enforced and later lifted by the President and also insisted that the President steps down.
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