The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Sri Lanka parliament cut PM’s budget

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COLOMBO: Sri Lanka’s parliament yesterday cut the budget of the Prime Minister’s office, a move designed to hinder disputed premier Mahinda Rajapaksa whose supporters boycotted the vote amid a weekslong political crisis that shows no sign of ending.

Lawmakers opposed to Rajapaksa, who has lost two noconfiden­ce votes in parliament, regard his administra­tion as illegitima­te and say he should not be able to use government money for his day-to-day expenses.

“This means the prime minister will be dysfunctio­nal. We will bring a similar motion tomorrow to cut down the expenditur­e of all other ministers,” said Ravi Karunanaya­ke, the former finance minister who proposed yesterday’s motion which passed 123 to none in the 225-member parliament.

The vote comes more than a month after President Maithripal­a Sirisena triggered the crisis by ousting former Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe and

This means the prime minister will be dysfunctio­nal. We will bring a similar motion tomorrow to cut down the expenditur­e of all other ministers. Ravi Karunanaya­ke, former finance minister

replacing him with Rajapaksa, who was then in turn sacked by parliament.

Rajapaksa ruled as president from 2005-2015, a decade of rule that critics said became increasing­ly authoritar­ian and marred by nepotism and corruption.

He presided over a bloody government victory over separatist rebels from the Tamil minority in 2009, ending a 27-year civil war.

Rajapaksa and his loyalists denounced yesterday’s vote as ‘illegal’ and questioned the impartiali­ty of parliament’s speaker.

“Speaker is acting completely illegally and arbitraril­y. We are not participat­ing in such illegal meetings,” Rajapaksa told reporters in parliament before yesterday’s proceeding­s started.

While the rhetoric remained belligeren­t from both sides, the atmosphere has cooled since Rajapaksa loyalists threw chairs and chilli paste at the speaker to try and disrupt a no-confidence motion almost two weeks ago.

Focus is now on the courts, which are next week expected to rule on whether Sirisena’s sacking of Wickremesi­nghe on Oct 26 and then his dissolutio­n of parliament on Nov 9 were constituti­onal.

The latest political ructions have not led to widespread unrest and violence.

Rajapaksa is seen as a hero by many among Sri Lanka’s Buddhist majority for ending the war but has been accused by diplomats of human rights abuses, particular­ly at the end of the conflict, which he denies. — Reuters

 ??  ?? Rajapaksa waves as he arrives at the parliament in Colombo, Sri Lanka. — Reuters photo
Rajapaksa waves as he arrives at the parliament in Colombo, Sri Lanka. — Reuters photo
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