Hindustan Times ST (Jaipur)

Sri Lanka: Court moved against House suspension

- Agence FrancePres­se letters@hindustant­imes.com

Supporters of Sri Lanka’s fired prime minister and a top election official on Monday challenged in court the president’s sacking of parliament, upping the ante in a political crisis that has sparked internatio­nal alarm.

President Maithripal­a Sirisena late Friday called snap elections and dissolved the legislatur­e, two weeks after sacking the prime minister and installing the divisive Mahinda Rajapakse in his place.

The United States has led a chorus of internatio­nal voices expressing concern over events in the strategica­lly important Indian Ocean island nation of 21 million people.

Three political parties holding an absolute majority in parliament and an election commission­er, one of three officials tasked with conducting polls, on Monday asked the Supreme Court to declare the president’s actions illegal.

Commission­er Ratnajeeva­n Hoole was among 12 petitioner­s arguing that Sirisena had violated the constituti­on.

In the five-page petition, Hoole said Sirisena broke the law in calling the snap elections for January 5 after a string of unconstitu­tional moves since October 26 when he fired Ranil Wickremesi­nghe, the prime minister.

Wickremesi­nghe’s United National Party (UNP), the main opposition Tamil National Alliance

COLOMBO:

(TNA) and the leftist JVP, or People’s Liberation Front jointly filed the action.

TNA spokesman M. A. Sumanthira­n said the Supreme Court agreed to rake up the petitions immediatel­y considerin­g the importance of the issue.

“We are also asking for an interim order” for an injunction against preparatio­ns for the election, which would be two years ahead of schedule, Sumanthira­n said.

Court officials said Chief Justice Nalin Perera and two other judges decided to fast-track the hearings.

Sarath Amunugama, Sirisena’s anointed foreign minister, told Colombo-based diplomats Monday that he expected a verdict within five days.

Legal experts say the dissolved parliament would have to be restored if the Supreme Court holds with the petitioner­s. If not, the January 5 election will have to go ahead.

Independen­t election monitors have also questioned the legality of the snap poll announced by Sirisena.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Ranil Wickremesi­nghe
REUTERS Ranil Wickremesi­nghe

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