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Al Jazeera
Al Jazeera
Politics
Saroj Pathirana

Sri Lanka protesters reject all-party gov’t, want Rajapaksas out

Crowds gathered in front of the presidential secretariat in Colombo [Courtesy of Shabeer Mohamed]

Colombo, Sri Lanka – Tens of thousands of Sri Lankan protesters have been occupying the President’s House, the presidential secretariat and the prime minister’s official residence in growing anger over the island nation’s unprecedented economic crisis.

The chaos began on Saturday when angry Sri Lankans stormed the official residence of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, a 73-year-old member of the powerful Rajapaksa clan whom protesters blame for the country’s worst economic crisis since 1948.

Rajapaksa is expected to officially resign on Wednesday. Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe has also offered to quit once an interim all-party government being discussed among the political parties to resolve the crisis is formed.

However, protesters have rejected an all-party government and said they will not vacate the government buildings until the president and the prime minister officially resign.

What do the protesters want?

“We are asking for the immediate resignation of Gotabaya Rajapaksa and Ranil Wickremesinghe. Following that, an interim government need to be in place for at least six months,” Shabeer Mohamed, 22, told Al Jazeera.

“We are against an all-party government,” he added.

Most protesters do not want the Sri Lanka Podujana Party (SLPP) controlled by the Rajapaksas to be a part of an all-party government.

Melani Gunathilake, 35, said the protest leaders strongly oppose an all-party government, a move in her view for the “Rajapaksa cartel” to control the government from behind the scenes.

“Our request is for an interim government, not an all-party government,” she told Al Jazeera.

Protesters in a conference room inside the President’s House [Courtesy of Shabeer Mohamed]

An Action Plan released by the protesters on July 5 lays out six key demands, including the formation of a People’s Council from the members of “Janatha Aragalaya” (People’s Struggle) that oversees the political transition in the country.

Establishing a new constitution that endorses people’s sovereignty during the term of an interim government is among the key demands of the protest movement.

Mohamed said some representatives of the protest movement are scheduled to meet the political parties and trade unions later on Tuesday.

“There we will reiterate our demands recently set out in our Action Plan,” he told Al Jazeera.


Six main demands of the protest leaders:

  • President Gotabaya Rajapaksha should immediately resign
  • PM Ranil Wickremesinghe and his government should also quit immediately
  • An interim government should be established for a maximum period of one year
  • A new constitution that endorses people’s sovereignty be established through a referendum, hopefully within a year
  • President’s executive powers should be reduced and democratic institutions strengthened until the new constitution is drafted
  • The fundamental objective of the interim government should be to implement the above proposals

While there is no leadership structure or a single organisation representing the mostly young protesters, the Inter University Student Union, widely regarded as the student wing of the left-wing Frontline Socialist Party, and the Socialist Youth Union affiliated to Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP), among others, are playing a leading role in the Janatha Aragalaya.

The interim government should make necessary reforms and pave the way for a new generation to take control of their future through a snap general election, Eranga Gunasekara of the Socialist Youth Union told Al Jazeera.

According to the Sri Lankan constitution, if both the president and the prime minister resign, the parliament’s speaker takes over the presidency. Current Speaker Mahinda Yapa Abeywardene is a relative of the Rajapaksas.

On Abeywardene’s possible appointment as acting president, Melani says the protesters are concerned although he is “no better than anyone else”.

“The options we are left with are no better but we do respect the current constitution. That is why we have called for a people-centric new constitution within one year,” she told Al Jazeera. “We don’t want to go beyond the constitution.”

Protesters in a conference room inside the president’s residence [Courtesy of Shabeer Mohamed]

Vimukthi Dushyantha, 29, of the Black Cap movement says while there is consensus among protesters on some issues, there is no common set of demands as the protest leaders differ on other issues.

“The Frontline Socialist Party, for example, is calling for a People’s Council but none of these groups have a common agenda. Therefore the best option is to go for a snap election after sorting out immediate issues within a short period,” he told Al Jazeera.

Dushyantha is of the opinion that the interim government should amend the constitution to reform the all-powerful executive presidency and bring immediate measures to ease people’s pain caused by the economic crisis.

Since 1978, Sri Lanka has been ruled under an executive presidential system. A reformist government in 2015 stripped the presidency of much of its powers and gave them to the parliament.

In October 2020, less than a year after becoming the president, Gotabaya Rajapaksa, with the help of his elder brother, then-Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa, moved an amendment in parliament, giving himself sweeping powers.

Dushyantha says it might take longer than expected to appoint a replacement for Gotabaya Rajapaksa as the current system to replace the head of state is “quite complicated”.

Will protesters contest elections?

Ranhiru Subhawickrama, 29, represents another group of protesters, which agrees with the main demands: the need for an interim government and a snap election within six months. His group, he says, will definitely contest the next general election.

“We don’t have trust in all these 225 MPs and the current political structure in general. The other thing is they call this an apolitical movement but several political parties are involved in this. So we will take our movement forward as a new political movement,” Subhawickrama told Al Jazeera.

Echoing the demands of the Action Plan, he also stressed the need for “some sort of a role” for the protest movement within the interim government.

Gunathilake said she does not want to contest the next election but she expects many among the protest movement to be legislators in the next parliament.

The Action Plan also urges the need “to eradicate racism and racial oppression” and to “strengthen the relevant legal foundations that affirm the equality of religion, language, sexuality, and other cultural identity as well as democracy and political freedom”.

Gunathilaka said the country’s rulers were using racism as part of their “divide-and-rule” strategy to divert attention from corruption, rights abuses and mismanagement of the economy.

“The strategy of the oppressor has been to divide the oppressed and keep them fighting to continue their misdeeds,” she said.

Sri Lanka for decades saw a bloody civil war with minority Tamils demanding a separate state in the north. The rebellion was brutally crushed in 2009 by then-President Mahinda Rajapaksa and Gotabaya as his defence secretary.

Since then, the Buddhist-majority country has witnessed hate attacks on Muslims who form less than 10 percent of the island’s population.

Gunathilaka hoped a new generation of Sri Lankans will set an example to the world on people’s power in a post-Rajapaksa Sri Lanka.

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