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Sri Lankan President To Resign After Protesters Storm Home, Office [Photos]

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Sri Lankan President, Gotabaya Rajapaksa is ready to tender his resignation, hours after a crowd of angry protesters chased him from the Presidential residence.

Hundreds of Sri Lankans marched in the capital Colombo to demand that the President takes responsibility for mismanaging the nation’s finances, and for crippling food and fuel shortages.

Naija News understands that Sri Lanka has suffered through months of shortages of basic goods, lengthy blackouts and galloping inflation after running out of foreign currency to import necessities.

The government has defaulted on its $51 billion external debt and is seeking an International Monetary Fund bailout.

After storming the gates of the presidential palace, a throng of protesters walked through its rooms, with some among the boisterous crowd jumping into the compound’s pool.

Others were seen laughing and lounging in the stately bedrooms of the residence, with one pulling out what he claimed was a pair of Rajapaksa’s underwear.

Rajapaksa had to be extracted from his residence by troops who fired into the air to keep the crowd outside at bay.

The leader had boarded a naval craft at the Colombo port and was taken to the island’s southern waters, where he let it be known he was finally bowing to months of calls for his resignation.

Soon after they stormed the presidential palace, Rajapaksa’s nearby seafront office also fell into the hands of protesters.

In a televised statement on Saturday, Parliamentary Speaker Mahinda Abeywardana said the President will step down on July 13 to ensure a peaceful transition.

“To ensure a peaceful transition, the president said he will step down on July 13,” Abeywardana said.

Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, the first person in line to succeed Rajapaksa, called a meeting with political leaders and said he was willing to step down to pave the way for a unity government.

But that failed to placate protesters, who stormed the premier’s private residence and set it alight after night fell.

Footage shared on social media showed a crowd cheering the blaze, which broke out shortly after a security detachment guarding Wickremesinghe attacked several journalists outside the home.

No casualties have been reported in the fire so far, and police said Wickremesinghe and his family were away at the time.

Security forces attempted to disperse the huge crowds that had mobbed Colombo’s administrative district earlier in the day, with dozens injured in the resulting clashes.

Police had withdrawn a curfew issued on Friday after opposition parties, rights activists and the bar association threatened to sue the police chief.

Thousands of anti-government protesters ignored the stay-home order and even forced railway authorities to operate trains to take them to Colombo for Saturday’s rally, officials said.

Sri Lanka has nearly exhausted its already scarce supplies of petrol, and people unable to travel to the capital held protests in other cities across the island.

Demonstrators had already maintained a months-long protest camp outside Rajapaksa’s office demanding his resignation.