Rajapaksa’s resignation, dated July 13, will not mean the end of the Gotagogama campaign. Nevertheless, having achieved their main aim, the protests will now likely rupture, as it has in countless other countries and situations. A clear instance of these ruptures emerged on July 13 itself, when, after Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe declared himself Acting President, some protesters stormed the State-run broadcaster, Rupavahini, announcing that they had taken over the transmission.
While not a few supported the move, many others criticized it for straying from the aragalaya’s main objective of peaceful protests. It even compelled “a group of people”, allied with the Gotagogama protests, stating unequivocally on social media that “what is happening now is not our aragalaya.” Such ruptures, almost unimaginable before, are on their way to becoming a fact of life in Sri Lanka’s vibrant anti-government protests – just as they have in Egypt and Lebanon. This is in many ways inevitable, and unavoidable.
(Uditha Devapriya is an international relations analyst, researcher, and columnist based in Sri Lanka. Views expressed are personal)