Sri Lanka crisis: One dead in firing
Wickremesinghe’s supporters camp outside official residence
Sri Lanka’s escalating political crisis turned deadly on Sunday when the bodyguard of a former cabinet minister fired on a crowd, killing at least one person and wounding two others, police said.
The former petroleum minister, Arjuna Ranatunga, was a member of the cabinet that President Maithripala Sirisena dissolved on Saturday, one day after ousting Ranil Wickremesinghe as prime minister and swearing in former strongman Mahinda Rajapaksa.
Many lawmakers and government ministers have denounced the move as unconstitutional, and mobs have attacked government officials — deepening concerns that this island nation is headed for more turmoil.
The gunfire broke out when Ranatunga tried to enter his office at the state-run Ceylon Petroleum Corp and was confronted by a group of workers loyal to the president. The guard opened fire, a police spokesman, Ruwan Gunasekera, said, killing one person and injuring two others, one critically. The guard was arrested.
On Sunday night, anxiety gripped the seaside capital, Colombo. Word quickly spread of the gunfire at a government ministry, and police trucks prowled the streets.
Tensions have been building between Sirisena and Wickremesinghe, and the president broke his silence on Sunday, accusing Wickremesinghe of being arrogant, stubborn and inflexible and calling his administration corrupt and fraudulent.
He insisted he had no choice but to appoint Rajapaksa as prime minister and said that Wickremesinghe must take the blame for the current political crisis. Sirisena suspended Parliament in an apparent move to give Rajapaksa time to try to muster enough support to survive any no-confidence vote.
In his first statement since being sworn in as prime minister, Rajapaksa said on Sunday Sirisena had invited him to accept the position during a “moment of national peril.” Rajapaksa, who is not yet certain of a parliamentary majority, urged all political parties to join together during “this very necessary political exercise,” and vowed to hold parliamentary elections soon.
Rajapaksa is a popular and divisive figure, a colourful politician who has cozied up to China and entered into many deals that backfired. His costliest mistake was taking billions of dollars in loans from China to build a port at the island’s southern tip that stands virtually deserted and now essentially belongs to China because Sri Lanka cannot repay the debt.
Hundreds of Wickremesinghe’s supporters, meanwhile, gathered outside the prime minister’s official residence on Sunday for the second consecutive day, waving party flags and denouncing Sirisena and Rajapaksa. Buddhist monks performed religious rites to invoke blessings on Wickremesinghe.
The speaker of Sri Lanka’s Parliament urged the president on Sunday to safeguard Wickremesinghe’s rights. Karu Jayasuriya said in a letter to Sirisena that any continued suspension of Parliament would have “serious and undesirable consequences.”