Fiji Sun

Sri Lankan PM Wickremesi­nghe Survives No Confidence Vote

- Reuters

Sri Lankan Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe on Wednesday survived a no confidence vote in Parliament after a majority of legislator­s voted to support his coalition government but the instabilit­y caused may damage its reform agenda.

The opposition, eyeing fractures within the ruling alliance, had sponsored the trust vote against Wickremesi­nghe blaming him for failing to prevent an alleged scam in the bond market, and for failing to stop anti-Muslim riots that occurred last month. Mr Wickremesi­nghe, who leads Sri Lanka’s United National Party (UNP), won the support of 122 members of the 225-member parliament, with 76 voting against him.

President Maithripal­a Sirisena’s Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) was split over the vote, with the only 16 of its 42 lawmakers who support the government voting for the PM. Some 26 legislator­s, many from the SLFP, were absent. “We can have a fresh start from tomorrow,” Harin Fernando, a minister with the UNP told the Parliament during the debate.

But many UNP legislator­s urged Mr Wickremesi­nghe to sack the SLFP ministers who had expressed no confidence in him - suggesting the unity of the coalition was fraying. Sacking the ministers would dent the government’s stability in parliament and affect Mr Wickremesi­nghe’s plans to pass key laws aimed at attracting more foreign investment.

The SLFP and UNP agreed on a coalition government after the last parliament­ary elections in August 2015. But the centre-left SLFP had opposed many liberal economic policy measures proposed by the centre-right UNP. Mr Wickremesi­nghe has faced criticism for failing to deliver on economic growth which slumped to a 16-year low of 3.1 per cent last year, its worst pace since a recession in 2001. The rupee currency is hovering at a record low.

The government is also under pressure as it tries to manage China’s expanding infrastruc­ture push in Sri Lanka, located near key shipping lanes in the Indian Ocean. Over-dependence on China for borrowing, however, has raised fears that this may push the tiny country deeper into debt.

 ?? Photo: AP ?? Sri Lankan PM Ranil Wickremesi­nghe and his wife Maitree offer prayers at a temple in Colombo on April 4, 2018.
Photo: AP Sri Lankan PM Ranil Wickremesi­nghe and his wife Maitree offer prayers at a temple in Colombo on April 4, 2018.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Fiji