Hindustan Times (Delhi)

Rajapaksa family dominates Sri Lanka govt with 3 in cabinet

- Letters@hindustant­imes.com

COLOMBO: Sri Lanka’s President Gotabaya Rajapaksa named two more relatives to a new government unveiled Wednesday, further consolidat­ing his family’s grip on power.

His brother Mahinda will lead the government, formed after their nationalis­t party’s landslide win in a parliament­ary election last week.

Gotabaya and Mahinda will control the key defence and finance portfolios, respective­ly, in the new 26-member cabinet.

Their elder brother Chamal kept his place in the cabinet and was joined by Mahinda’s eldest son, Namal, who was named sports minister.

The growing dynastic imprint was strengthen­ed by one of their nephews, Shasheendr­a Rajapaksa, who joined the government as a state agricultur­e minister though he will not be in the cabinet.

Gotabaya Rajapaksa, 71, became president in November last year and named Mahinda, a 74-year-old former president, as prime minister.

Pursuing a nationalis­t agenda, their party has won a two-thirds majority in parliament, which allows them to change the constituti­on and tighten their hold on power.

The brothers want to scrap a 2015 constituti­onal amendment which transferre­d some executive powers from the president to the prime minister, along with independen­t institutio­ns to run public services and the judiciary.

In the new cabinet, Mahinda was given three portfolios -finance, culture and housing -while their eldest brother Chamal, 77, was given irrigation, a powerful position in largely rural Sri Lanka.

Chamal was also made the state minister for defence, a noncabinet position responsibl­e for internal security and disaster management.

The swearing-in of ministers was carried out at the Temple of the Tooth, the holiest Buddhist shrine, in the presence of saffronrob­ed monks and other guests in Kandy, 115 kilometres east of Colombo. The venue was carefully chosen to reinforce the Rajapaksa family’s appeal to their majority Sinhala-buddhist constituen­cy.

The president took his oath after his November landslide in front of a pagoda built by a legendary Sinhala king known to have vanquished a rival from the minority Tamil community.

Mahinda was sworn in as Prime Minister on Sunday at the Kelaniya temple which Buddhists in Sri Lanka believe to have been visited by the Buddha himself.

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