Ranil to take oaths as Acting President today

Following the official confirmation of Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s resignation from the presidency, Ranil Wickremesinghe is expected to swear in as the Acting President today (July 15) to fill in the vacated position.

Meanwhile, the Office of the Speaker of Parliament announced last night that a letter of resignation from President Rajapaksa was received through the Sri Lankan High Commission in Singapore.

However, an official statement in this regard will be made by Speaker Mahinda Yapa Abeywardena today after verifying the authenticity of the letter and finalizing all legal matters.

Pursuant to Article 38 of the Constitution, the Head of State can step down by submitting a resignation letter signed by him to the Speaker of Parliament.

The resignation letter was sent after the embattled President landed in Singapore after departing the Maldives on board a Saudia Airlines flight yesterday. His final destination still remains uncertain.

With regard to President Rajapaksa’s arrival, the Singapore Foreign Ministry said that neither “had he asked for asylum, nor had he been granted asylum” in the country.

Source: Adaderana

Commonwealth urges Sri Lankan leaders to safeguard democratic governance

The Commonwealth Secretary-General, Patricia Scotland QC, has called on political leaders in Sri Lanka to safeguard democratic governance, the rule of law and human rights, in adherence with the values and principles of the Commonwealth Charter.

The Secretary-General also reiterated the Commonwealth Secretariat’s commitment to support Sri Lanka in protecting and strengthening its institutions and constitutional governance and facilitating economic stability. She called on all in Sri Lanka to exercise restraint with a view to a peaceful transition.

Speaking on the situation, the Secretary-General Patricia Scotland QC said the Commonwealth is a community that is underpinned by shared values and Sri Lanka, as one of the oldest democracies in Asia and a founding member of the modern Commonwealth, has always shown its strong commitment to these tenets, which are cherished and trusted by its people.

“I call on all those in positions of leadership to safeguard democratic principles, the rule of law and human rights.”

The Secretary-General has been in contact with the Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe and other leaders of Sri Lanka.

In her statement on the situation, the Secretary-General also said it is important that the concerns of the people of Sri Lanka on governance and other issues are addressed.

The Commonwealth Chief urged continued dialogue to this end and called on the international community to continue to assist Sri Lanka in this hour of economic need.

“I am hopeful that these challenges will be met according to the letter and spirit of the Constitution of Sri Lanka and the values enshrined in the Commonwealth Charter. The Commonwealth Secretariat stands ready to assist Sri Lanka in ensuring constitutional principles, and the values of the Commonwealth Charter, are upheld.”

Source: ColomboPage

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Several countries advice against travel to SriLanka

The United Kingdom, Singapore, and Bahrain have asked their citizens to avoid non-essential travel to Sri Lanka as an economic collapse in the country has led to massive protests.

The island nation is experiencing a severe economic crisis which has led to shortages of basic necessities including medicines, cooking gas, fuel and food.

Source: News 1st

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Protesters leave Temple Trees and Prime Minister’s Office

Protesters vacated Temple Trees and the Prime Minister’s Office today.

The protesters said that they handed back the buildings to the public.

The Galle Face protesters had decided to hand over the President’s House, President’s Office, and Prime Minister’s Office back to the authorities.

The decision was announced by the protesters today.

Thousands stormed the Presidents House on 9th July and occupied the premises since then.

Protesters also stormed the Presidential Secretariat and Temple Trees on the same day.

Yesterday protesters stormed the Prime Minister’s House at Flower Road.

The Bar Association of Sri Lanka had appealed to the protesters to return the buildings to the State.

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Curfew imposed in Colombo District

Curfew has been imposed in the Colombo administrative district with effect from 12 noon today until 5.00 a.m. tomorrow (15), the Government Information Department announced.

Acting President and Prime Minister Ranil Wickramasinghe has imposed the curfew under the provisions of the Public Security Ordinance, it said.

The curfew order directs that no person shall be on any public road, railway, public park, public recreation ground or other public ground or the seashore in such areas, during that period except under the authority of a written permit granted by Secretary to Ministry of Defence or Secretary to Ministry of Public Security or Inspector-General of Police or any officer authorized by them.

An island-wide curfew imposed from 12 noon yesterday was lifted at 5.00 a.m. today (14). Prior to that, the Acting President had ordered to impose a curfew in the Western Province and a state of emergency island-wide.

He had also ordered the security forces to arrest those engaging in unruly behaviour and to take into custody the vehicles they travel in.

The move came as thousands of angry protesters gathered outside the PM’s office, and several other locations in Colombo. Protesters had later stormed and occupied the prime minister’s office.

Source: Adaderana

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We will stand by the people of Sri Lanka: India

India, on Thursday, made it clear that it would continue to stand by the people of Sri Lanka as they seek to realise their aspirations for prosperity and progress through democratic means and values as well as established institutions and constitutional framework.

At a media briefing here, Ministry of External Affairs (MEA) spokesperson Arindam Bagchi noted that India had responded promptly to the economic hardships faced by the people of the island nation by extending assistance to the tune of $3.8 billion this year alone.

The spokesperson said Sri Lanka is an important neighbour and India was closely monitoring the evolving situation there. New Delhi continued to remain engaged with all relevant stakeholders in Sri Lanka, he confirmed.

”We look forward to an early solution to the situation related to the government and the leadership through democratic means,” the spokesperson added.

He reiterated that India had no role in facilitating President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s escape from the island nation yesterday after the public revolt against his leadership.

Source: The Statesman

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As Sri Lanka’s ruling Rajapaksas flee, Pandora Papers reveal ties to UAE properties

When embattled Sri Lankan President Gotabaya Rajapaksa attempted to flee his country in the face of economic and political crisis this week, he chose the United Arab Emirates as his preferred destination, underscoring the ruling Rajapaksa family’s ties to the Persian Gulf financial hub.

Rajapaksa and some of his relatives, including a former finance minister, were stopped from boarding flights to Dubai, the UAE’s commercial center, on Tuesday as protesters surrounded the airport, CNN reported. Rajapaksa was expected to resign today, but instead fled to the Maldives on a military jet, with some media speculating that he may head to Dubai at a later stage.

The vast wealth of the Rajapaksa family, who have dominated the country’s politics for nearly two decades, became a flashpoint in massive protests that have engulfed the country since March as Sri Lanka faces critical shortages of fuel, medicines and other goods partly triggered by years of mismanagement of state funds. A series of top political resignations left the president and his brother, then-Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa, further isolated. The mass demonstrations culminated in hundreds of protesters occupying the palaces of the president and prime minister on Saturday, partying at the estates and setting the latter on fire in recent days.

The hidden assets of some Rajapaksa family members were revealed last fall in the Pandora Papers, a global investigation of offshore finance led by the International Consortium of Investigative Journalists. The documents revealed how Nirupama Rajapaksa, a scion of the ruling family, and her husband, businessman Thirukumar Nadesan, had used secretive shell companies and trusts to accumulate more than $18 million in tax havens, and own artworks and luxury properties in London and Sydney.

The Pandora Papers documents, leaked from 14 offshore service providers, show that the couple has secret ownership ties to UAE properties as well.

Included in the leak of 11.9 million confidential files are utility bills, a UAE resident identity card and other records showing that, as of 2019, Nadesan and the couple’s two children were residents of Dubai. The documents link them to an apartment in a luxury residential skyscraper but don’t say whether the family owns the property.

Nadesan, identified in the files as the manager of a Dubai-based asphalt trader in 2016, also listed another Dubai address as his residence in an application to open a bank account for one of his shell companies.

Nirupama Rajapaksa is related to both Gotabaya Rajapaksa and his brother, Mahinda, who over the years have exchanged top posts, including president and prime minister until recently, when both were forced to step down amid the economic crisis

Following the Pandora Papers revelations about the couple’s offshore holdings last October, President Rajapaksa announced his government will look into the matter and the Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption launched an investigation. But the probe stalled, according to Sri Lankan media which cited banks’ delay in providing information about Nadesan and Nirupama Rajapaksa’s accounts.

In the meantime, she has traveled to Dubai at least once, Sri Lankan newspapers reported. Their son, who resides in the emirate according to the leaked records, often parades his luxurious lifestyle in the Gulf in selfies published on his Instagram channel.

Images captured on a blog show the young man dining on a rooftop against the backdrop of Dubai’s night skyline.

Nirupama Rajapaksa, Nadesan and their son did not respond to ICIJ’s requests for comments sent via email and Instagram.

A rising hideaway for powerful exiles
In recent years, the UAE has become a popular destination for oligarchs and criminals who seek a safe haven to hide their wealth after other offshore jurisdictions introduced more controls under pressure from the international community.

As part of the Pandora Papers investigation, ICIJ documented how the confederation of seven sheikdoms offers shell companies that mask their real owners’ identities, dozens of internal free-trade zones that provide even more shadows for them to hide in, and a regulatory system known for what anti-corruption advocates call its “ask-no-questions, see-no-evil approach” to dealing with money tied to gold smuggling, arms trafficking and other crimes.

Source: International consortium of investigative journalists

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Sri Lanka’s fled president sends resignation letter via email, legality checked – sources

Sri Lanka’s embattled president Gotabaya Rajapaksa, who has fled the country fearing for his life, has sent his resignation letter via email to Parliament Speaker Mahinda Yapa Abeywardena, the Speaker’s office said on Thursday.

However, the official announcement was delayed until the Speaker’s office check for legality.

Rajapaksa, who fled the country and flew to Male in an Air Force flight on Wednesday early morning was expected to send the letter later on the same day. However, it was delayed as Rajapaksa, was not able to reach his “final destination”, his close allies have told Economy Next.

The letter was sent via email to the Speaker and an official who is aware of the matter said they are checking the legality of the latter and if such letter could be sent via email.

“The Speaker has received the resignation latter of President Gotabaya Rajapaksa via the office of Sri Lankan embassy in Singapore,” Speaker’s Media Secretary Indunil Abeywardena said in a tatement.

“After clarifying the accuracy and finalising the legality of the letter, the speaker will officially announce with regard t this by tomoorow.”

However, a government source said the original letter would be handed over to the Speaker through a key official of Rajapaksa staff.

Rajapaksa sent the letter after he reached Singapore late on Thursday from Maldives, flying in a Saudi Arabian Airline. His stay in Maldives was facilitated by the Ibrahim Mohamed Solih’s administration in Maldives with its Parliament Speaker Mohamed Nasheed personally visiting to the Male airport to receive him amid many Sri Lankans living in Male protested against the move.

“President GR has resigned. I hope Sri Lanka can now move forward,” Nasheed tweeted.

“I believe the President would not have resigned if he were still in Sri Lanka, and fearful of losing his life. I commend the thoughtful actions of the Govt of Maldives. My best wishes to the people of Sri Lanka.”

Rajapaksa was forced to flee after tens of thousands of protesters stormed into his official residence on Saturday (09). The protesters had demanded his resignation for his policy failures after his government printed trillions of rupees which eventually caused Balance of payment crisis, dollars shortage and steep decline in foreign currency reserves.

The lack of dollars later led to shortage of essentials like food, medicine, cooking gas, and essential foods including milk powder. His policy on overnight chemical fertilizer policy ban led to a food shortage and the island nation is facing a looming food shortage.

It was not immediately clear if Rajapaksa would request for political asylum in any foreign country. Singapore government confirmed his entry into city nation.

“In response to media queries, it is confirmed that Mr Rajapaksa has been allowed entry into Singapore on a private visit,” the Singapore’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs said in a statement.

“He has not asked for asylum and neither has he been granted any asylum. Singapore generally does not grant requests for asylum.”

Sources close to the president have said he was aiming for a country in the Middle East.

Source: EconomyNext

Protestors again attack PM’s office and force State TV stations to shut telecasts

Protestors again attacked the Sri Lankan Prime Minister’s office and forced State TV stations to shut telecasts on Wednesday even as President Gotabaya Rajapaksa appointed Prime Minster Ranil Wickremesinghe as Acting President.

Despite the clamping of an island-wide State Emergency and curfew in the Western province on Wednesday, crowds of agitators attacked the Prime Minister’s office and occupied it. They also attacked the State TV stations Sri Lanka Rupavahini Corporation and Independent Television Network and forced them suspend telecasts. The agitators demanded that they telecast only unbiased news.

The leader of the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) Anura Kumara Dissanayake, has urged both the President and the Prime Minister to resign immediately.

The decisions regarding the Prime Minster were announced in the same statement issued by Gotabaya Rajapaksa from his safe haven in the Maldives.

The announcement entitled ‘Government Notice’ said: “ It is hereby notified that I, Gotabaya Rajapaksa, President of the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka, being of the opinion that I am unable to exercise . perform and discharge the powers, duties and functions of the Office of the President, and by reason of my absence from Sri Lanka, do hereby appoint Hon Ranil Wickremesinghe, Prime Minister of the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka, under Art 37 (1) of the Constitution of the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka, with effect from July 13, 2022,to exercise, perform and discharge the powers,duties and functions of the Office of President during such period of my absence from Sri Lanka.”

Meanwhile the Speaker of parliament Mahinda Yapa Abeywardena announced that Gotabaya Rajapaksa had appointed Wickremesinghe as the Acting President and that Rajapaksa had informed him that he would submit his resignation “within today”

President appointed PM as Acting President: Speaker

President Gotabaya Rajapaksa has informed the Speaker of Parliament that Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe has been appointed as the Acting President of Sri Lanka.

Speaker Mahinda Yapa Abeywardena announced this in a brief statement made to the media today (13).

“I was informed that under article 37 (1) of the Constitution, as His Excellency the President Gotabaya Rajapaksa is away from the country, Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe has been appointed to cover the duties and function of that position,” he said.

Earlier today, the PM’s Office said that Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, as the Acting President, has ordered to impose curfew in the Western Province with immediate effect and to impose emergency law island-wide.

Wickremesinghe has also ordered the security forces to arrest those engaging in unruly behaviour and to take into custody the vehicles they travel in, the PM’s Office said.

The move came as thousands of angry protesters gathered outside the PM’s office, and several other locations in Colombo this morning.

“Since the president is out of the country, an emergency has been declared to deal with the situation in the country,” Dinouk Colombage, spokesman for Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, told AFP.

Thousands of demonstrators had mobbed the premier’s office, prompting police to fire tear gas to hold them back from overrunning the compound.

“There are ongoing protests outside the prime minister’s office in Colombo and we need the curfew to contain the situation,” a senior police officer told AFP.

Asked how Mr. Wickremesinghe could invoke “powers of an acting President” when Mr. Gotabaya is still in office, PM’s spokesman Dinouk Colombage had told The Hindu: “The legal explanation will follow. We want to get the situation under control first.”

Earlier on Wednesday, the Sri Lankan Air Force said that under the provisions of the Constitution and on a request by the government it provided a plane to fly the president, his wife and two security officials to the Maldives.

“On government request and in terms of powers available to a President under the Constitution, with complete approval from the ministry of defence, the President, his wife and two security officials were provided a Sri Lanka Air Force plane to depart from the Katunayake international airport for the Maldives in the early hours of July 13,” an official announced.

On Saturday, Rajapaksa announced that he would resign on July 13 after thousands of protestors stormed his official residence and office.

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