The Sunday Guardian

Sri lanka crisis deepens as parliament gets suspended

The Parliament suspension means Sri Lanka Prime Minister Wickremesi­nghe will not immediatel­y have an opportunit­y to prove his majority.

- REUTERS

Sri Lanka’s President Maithripal­a Sirisena on Saturday suspended parliament till 16 November, a day after removing Ranil Wickremesi­nghe as prime minister and replacing him with former leader Mahinda Rajapaksa in a surprise move that signals escalating political tensions in the South Asian nation.

“The president has prorogued the parliament,” cabinet spokesman Rajitha Senaratne told reporters.

Minutes earlier Wickremesi­nghe, who says he remains prime minister, urged the speaker to convene parliament to prove he retained his parliament­ary majority.

“I have the majority in the parliament, convene the parliament to resolve this,” Wickremesi­nghe told a press conference in Colombo on Saturday, flanked by all his coalition partners except Sirisena’s party.

“Only parliament can show who has the majority,” he said.

The parliament suspension means Wickremesi­ng- he will not immediatel­y have an opportunit­y to prove his majority, amid speculatio­n that some of his party members would cross over to back Rajapaksa for perks and ministeria­l portfolios. The island nation’s Media and Finance Minister Mangala Samaraweer­a on Friday condemned Rajapaksa’s appointmen­t as “an anti-democratic coup” and violation of the constituti­on.

A delegation of the European Union said on Saturday that it was closely following the events in Sri Lanka.

“We urge all parties to fully act in accordance with Sri Lanka’s constituti­on, to refrain from violence, to follow due institutio­nal process, to respect the independen­ce of institutio­ns, and freedom of media.”

Sirisena administer­ed the oath of office to Rajapaksa on Friday after sacking Wickremesi­nghe, who was away touring the south of the country. Under Sri Lanka’s constituti­on, the prime minister heads parliament and the president has executive powers.

The political rift, which comes amid weakening eco- nomic growth in Sri Lanka, follows months of infighting in the ruling coalition.

Relations between Wickremesi­nghe’s United National Party ( UNP) and Sirisensa’s United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA) have been strained recently after Sirisensa criticised Wickremesi­nghe’s for not adequately investigat­ing an assassinat­ion plot against the president. The UPFA had threatened to quit the ruling coalition.

Sirisena accused India’s intelligen­ce services of involvemen­t in that plot, a claim New Delhi and Co- lombo have both denied.

There was no immediate reaction from India which has long seen Sri Lanka, located just off its southern tip, as part of its area of influence. India’s foreign ministry did not respond to a request seeking comment on the change of leadership in Sri Lanka. India has been concerned about Rajapaksa’s wooing of China — he ushered in billions of dollars of investment from Beijing to help rebuild the country following the end of a 26-year-long civil war against Tamil separatist­s in 2009.

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