Politicians Homes Set On Fire, Shoot Orders As Protests Against Govt Intensifies

Protests over the economic crisis have claimed at least eight lives so far!


The civil unrest in Sri Lanka has escalated to unprecedented levels over the past few days as the protests against the country’s government over the economic crisis continue.

Mahinda Rajapaksa (76), resigned as the Sri Lankan Prime Minister on Monday, is facing calls for arrest for inciting violence that claimed at least eight lives.

Supporters of Mahinda Rajapaksa clashed with the anti-government protesters, who demanded his ouster over Sri Lanka’s worst economic crisis that has led to acute shortages of food, fuel and medicines and prolonged power cuts.

On Monday, Mahinda Rajapaksa quit his post but violence erupted in the island nation soon after his resignation. Soon after his resignation, the ancestral home of the politically-influential Rajapaksa family in Hambantota was set on fire by protesters. The homes of several ministers and ex-ministers were also attacked and set on fire.

Sri Lanka’s Ministry of Defence on Tuesday ordered the Army, the Air Force, and the Navy personnel to open fire on anyone looting public property or causing harm to the natives. Nearly 250 people have been injured in the violence in Colombo and other parts of the country.

Prime Minister Mahinda's House in Kurunegala was also set on fire by protesters while a mob also destroyed D A Rajapaksa Memorial - constructed in the memory of the father of Mahinda and Gotabaya - in Medamulana, Hambantota.

The Sri Lankan government has imposed a nationwide curfew and deployed troops in the capital, Colombo.

The attack on Rajapaksas’s and other politicians’ homes sparked speculation that they fled to India. The Indian High Commission in Sri Lanka on Tuesday refuted such rumours as "fake and blatantly false". Mahinda Rajapaksa, along with his family, was reported to have fled his official residence and taken shelter at a naval base in Trincomalee on Tuesday.

Anti-government protesters have reportedly set up a checkpoint on the road leading to the Bandaranaike International Airport in Colombo to prevent the Rajapaksa family and its loyalists from fleeing the country.

Sri Lankan Parliament Speaker on Tuesday requested embattled President Gotabaya Rajapaksa to reconvene the House this week to discuss the current situation amid unprecedented violence and widespread protest against the government over the country's worst economic crisis in decades.

On Tuesday, Sri Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa urged people to stop "violence and acts of revenge" against fellow citizens and vowed to address the political and economic crisis facing the nation.

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