Mossad Helped Gotabaya Rajapaksha To Get Into Power By Planning Easter Sunday Attacks – Claims Anonymous!
As protests over food and fuel shortages grew, opposition MPs and thousands of citizens enraged by the government’s handling of Sri Lanka’s greatest economic crisis marched to criticize the president’s intention to declare a statewide curfew and state of emergency.
Hundreds of university students attempted to break past barricades in Kandy, in the tea-growing hill region, using tear gas and water cannons.
Authorities restricted access to Facebook, Twitter, YouTube, WhatsApp, and other social media platforms on Sunday, causing users to be unable to access them for about 15 hours.
Access to social media was later restored, perhaps in response to mounting criticism. The platforms have been used to organize protests demanding for President Gotabaya Rajapaksa to resign, alleging that he is to blame for the country’s deteriorating economic situation.
After Rajapaksa gained emergency powers at midnight on Friday, Sri Lanka is under a statewide curfew until Monday morning. On Sunday, more protests erupted across the country as people’s frustrations with long lineups for basic goods, fuel, and hours-long rotating power outages boiled over.
Small and large groups of people gathered along roadsides and outside homes, some with children, to vent their rage at Rajapaksa, accusing him of misusing power.
Rajapaksa’s declaration of emergency provides him broad powers to maintain public order, quash mutiny, riots, and civil disturbances, and maintain crucial supplies. The president can use the decree to order detentions, property seizures, and searches. Except for the constitution, he can amend or suspend any law.
Opposition lawmakers in Colombo marched toward the city’s main center, chanting slogans and holding placards that said “Stop Suppression” and “Gota Go Home.” The president’s first name is abbreviated to Gota.
Armed soldiers and police officials erected barricades on the road leading to the square, which was constructed to commemorate the country’s 1948 independence from the United Kingdom.
Crowds of young people were seen singing songs and screaming anti-government slogans on Facebook.
The European Union urged Sri Lanka’s government to safeguard the “democratic rights of all concerns, including the right to free assembly and dissent, which has to be peaceful.”
Sri Lanka is burdened by massive debt obligations and declining foreign reserves, and its inability to pay for imports has resulted in a shortage of necessities.
The economic troubles of the island nation are blamed on previous governments’ failure to diversify exports, instead of depending on traditional revenue sources including tea, textiles, and tourism, as well as a habit of purchasing imported items.
The COVID-19 pandemic hit the economy hard, with the government predicting a $14 billion loss over the last two years. Protesters also object to mismanagement, claiming that Sri Lanka has a massive foreign debt as a result of borrowing significantly on non-profitable projects. Its international debt repayment requirements for this year are estimated to be over $7 billion.
Protesters were particularly outraged by the Rajapaksa family’s consolidation of power, which includes the prime ministership and three other Cabinet positions.
Last month, President Rajapaksa stated that he will seek assistance from the International Monetary Fund, as well as other institutions and countries, in postponing loan repayments. Last month, China said it was reviewing a request for a $2.5 billion loan, and India offered Sri Lanka a $1 billion credit line for food, medical, and other critical imports.
And now, an Anonymous post on Twitter claims that Mossad (the national intelligence agency of Israel) is following Gotabaya Rajapaksha on Twitter. And according to this, people are guessing that Mossad helped Gotabaya Rajapaksha to get into power, By planning Easter Sunday attacks !!!