Sri Lanka's ousted leader faces arrest calls after return

Rajapaksa touched down in Colombo seven weeks after he fled the extraordinary protests triggered by an economic meltdown that many lay at his feet.

Protesters stormed the president's house in July, amid fury and desperation over the economic crisis.
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Protesters stormed the president's house in July, amid fury and desperation over the economic crisis.

Deposed Sri Lankan president Gotabaya Rajapaksa has faced calls for his arrest after returning home from self-imposed exile under the protection of the government that took charge when he fled.

Rajapaksa fled the island nation under military escort in July after a huge crowd stormed his official residence following months of angry demonstrations against his government.

The 73-year-old announced his resignation from Singapore and spent weeks under virtual house arrest at a Bangkok hotel lobbying his successor to allow his return.

Leaders of the protest campaign that toppled his government said Rajapaksa, who lost his presidential immunity after leaving office, should now be brought to justice.

"Gotabaya returned because no country is willing to accept him, he has no place to hide," Joseph Stalin, the leader of a teachers' trade union that helped mobilise demonstrators, told AFP.

"He should be arrested immediately for causing such misery for the 22 million people of Sri Lanka. He should be prosecuted for his crimes."

READ MORE: Sri Lanka's ousted president Gotabaya Rajapaksa returns home

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Chaotic mismanagement

Rajapaksa's government was accused of chaotic mismanagement as the Sri Lankan economy spiralled into an unprecedented downturn.

The crisis saw acute shortages of food, lengthy blackouts and long queues at gas stations for scarce fuel supplies after the country ran out of foreign currency to pay for vital imports.

"He can't live freely as if nothing has happened," said Stalin, who was named for the former Soviet leader by his leftist father.

Rajapaksa arrived at the main international airport in Colombo and was garlanded with flowers by a welcoming party of ministers and senior politicians as he disembarked.

He was driven in a security convoy to a new official residence in the capital provided to him by the government of his successor, President Ranil Wickremesinghe.

Rajapaksa's younger brother Basil, the former finance minister, met with Wickremesinghe last month and requested protection to allow the deposed leader to return.

Rights activists have vowed to press for Rajapaksa's prosecution on a litany of charges, including his alleged role in the 2009 assassination of prominent newspaper editor Lasantha Wickrematunge.

"We welcome his decision to return so that we can bring him to justice for the crimes he has committed," Tharindu Jayawardhana, a spokesperson for the Sri Lanka Young Journalists' Association, said Friday.

Several corruption cases lodged against Rajapaksa stalled after he was elected president.

Rajapaksa also faces charges in a US court over Wickrematunge's murder and the torture of Tamil prisoners at the end of the island's traumatic civil war in 2009.

Rajapaksa won a landslide election in 2019 after promising "vistas of prosperity and splendour" but saw his popularity nosedive as the country's crisis worsened.

His government was accused of introducing unsustainable tax cuts that drove up government debt and exacerbated the country's economic problems.

READ MORE: IMF agrees to loan $2.9B to cash-strapped Sri Lanka

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