Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Sri Lanka slides into a deeper political quagmire

The wait for the crisis to play out to some sort of conclusion could be a long one

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The political crisis in Sri Lanka has seen many twists and turns since President Maithripal­a Sirisena removed Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe and replaced him with Mahinda Rajapaksa in October. Lawmakers voted overwhelmi­ngly on Wednesday to demand the reinstatem­ent of Mr Wickremesi­nghe, but Mr Rajapakse has clung on to the position despite inadequate numbers in the Parliament. Mr Rajapakse and his allies have been boycotting the Parliament and Mr Sirisena has pledged he will not give the post of premier back to Mr Wickremesi­nghe. On Thursday, the Supreme Court ruled that Mr Sirisena’s decision to dissolve Parliament was unconstitu­tional, paving the way for his potential impeachmen­t.

Mr Sirisena had earlier said he would accept SC’s verdict, and some believe this could be the only way out of the quagmire that Sri Lanka currently finds itself in. There are others who think fresh elections are the only solution in a country that occupies a strategic position in India’s immediate neighbourh­ood. The political divisions have come at a time when Sri Lanka has been trying to shake off the effects of a deadly civil war that lasted more than a quarter century and build a more inclusive system.

India was among the issues that led to difference­s between Mr Sirisena and Mr Wickremesi­nghe, with the president reportedly opposing the former premier’s plans to award the eastern container terminal project at Colombo Port to New Delhi. The rehabilita­tion of hundreds of thousands of Sri Lankan Tamils affected by the civil war also remains a priority for India. During the political crisis in the Maldives earlier this year, India learnt the value of the waiting game as opposed to any direct interventi­on, and it worked with other world powers to mount pressure on the authoritar­ian regime of former president Abdulla Yameen. It appears to have adopted a similar approach in the case of Sri Lanka, but the wait for the crisis to play out to some sort of conclusion could be a long one.

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