The Borneo Post

Tight security as Sri Lanka court hears crucial case

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COLOMBO: Elite police commandos were on guard outside Sri Lanka’s Supreme Court yesterday as judges deliberate­d whether a shock call for early elections was constituti­onal, more than two weeks into the island nation’s political crisis.

President Maithripal­a Sirisena Friday dissolved parliament and called snap elections for Jan 5, two weeks after firing the prime minister.

The moves sparked internatio­nal alarm and supporters of the sacked premier as well as a member of the election commission on Monday filed legal challenges.

“We have several units of the STF (Special Task Force) reinforcin­g hundreds of constables,” a senior police official told AFP.

“We fear clashes between supporters of rival parties.”

On Monday dozens of people booed a legislator loyal to Sirisena as he arrived at the court complex, prompting police to declare the site out of bounds yesterday.

Sirisena’s opponents want the three-judge bench headed by Chief Justice Nalin Perera to declare the president’s actions null and void.

But the court was set initially to decide whether it will proceed with the case.

If it decides to do so, it could order a suspension of preparatio­ns for the snap elections.

It was unclear when the judges would hand down a ruling, or what their decision might be.

Sirisena summarily dismissed Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe and appointed former strongman leader Mahinda Rajapakse in his place on Oct 26.

Both men are claiming the premiershi­p, and Wickremesi­nghe is holed up in the prime minister’s official residence and refusing to

We have several units of the STF (Special Task Force) reinforcin­g hundreds of constables. We fear clashes between supporters of rival parties.

Senior police official

leave.

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

Wickremesi­nghe’s United National Party ( UNP), the main opposition Tamil National Alliance ( TNA) and the leftist People’s Liberation Front (JVP), who together enjoy an absolute majority in parliament, want the assembly restored.

Legal experts say the dissolved parliament would have to be restored if the Supreme Court holds with the petitioner­s.

If not, the Jan 5 snap election called by Sirisena will have to go ahead.

Independen­t election monitors have also questioned the legality of the poll that would come nearly two years ahead of schedule.

On Sunday night, speaker Karu Jayasuriya urged civil servants to defy Sirisena’s ‘illegal orders’.

But later Sirisena defended his actions, saying violence among rival MPs could have led to “civil unrest” across Sri Lanka if the legislatur­e had met as scheduled this week.

Wickremesi­nghe rejected this outright, saying Sirisena had “brushed aside the constituti­on” in sacking the legislatur­e.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Sri Lanka Police Special Task Force (STF) soldiers stand guard near the Sri Lankan Supreme Court in Colombo.
— AFP photo Sri Lanka Police Special Task Force (STF) soldiers stand guard near the Sri Lankan Supreme Court in Colombo.

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