Sri Lanka President Abscond On A Military Aircraft
Gotabaya Rajapaksa

After months of huge protests over the island nation’s worst-ever economic crisis, Sri Lanka’s embattled president fleed his country early on Wednesday, likely as a prelude to his resignation.

Gotabaya Rajapaksa, who fled his official residence in Colombo shortly before tens of thousands of protestors overran it, had pledged over the weekend to step down on Wednesday and pave the way for a ‘peaceful transition of power.’

Rajapaksa is thought to have intended to leave the country before resigning in order to avoid the risk of being arrested because he is immune from arrest in his capacity as president.

He, his wife and a bodyguard were among four passengers on board an Antonov-32 military aircraft which took off from the main international airport heading for the neighbouring Maldives, according to immigration sources.

Read Also: Poverty: Citizens Invade Residence Of Sri Lankan President

‘Their passports were stamped and they boarded the special air force flight’ an immigration official involved in the process told reporters on Wednesday.

Africa Today News, New York reports that the departure of the 73-year-old leader once known as ‘The Terminator’ had been stymied for more than 24 hours in a humiliating stand-off with immigration personnel at the airport.

He had wanted to fly to Dubai on a commercial flight, but staff at Bandaranaike International withdrew from VIP services and insisted that all passengers had to go through public counters.

The presidential party were reluctant to go through regular channels fearing public reactions, a security official said, and as a result missed four flights on Monday that could have taken them to the United Arab Emirates.

Clearance for a military flight to land in the closest neighbour India was not immediately secured, a security official said, and at one point on Tuesday the group headed to a naval base with a view to fleeing by sea.

Rajapaksa’s youngest brother Basil, who resigned in April as finance minister, missed his own Emirates flight to Dubai early Tuesday after a tense standoff of his own with airport staff.

Basil — who holds US citizenship in addition to Sri Lankan nationality — tried to use a paid concierge service for business travellers, but airport and immigration staff said they had withdrawn from the fast track service.

Africa Today News, New York

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