The Borneo Post

Court rules against Sri Lanka President, impeachmen­t looms

-

COLOMBO: Sri Lanka’s Supreme Court opened the way for potential impeachmen­t proceeding­s against the president yesterday, ruling that he broke the law by dissolving parliament last month.

The verdict is a major blow to Maithripal­a Sirisena, seven weeks into a political crisis in the Indian Ocean island nation that has sparked alarm abroad and concern over its finances.

The seven-judge bench unanimousl­y agreed that Sirisena violated the constituti­on when he dissolved parliament last month and called a snap election nearly two years ahead of schedule.

“I make order that the Nov 9 Gazette (decree) sacking parliament... has no force or effect in law and declare its operation illegal,” Chief Justice Nalin Perera said as he delivered the landmark judgement to a packed courtroom.

Sacked prime minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe’s party had said it would await the outcome of yesterday’s decision before deciding whether to open impeachmen­t proceeding­s.

Sirisena triggered the unpreceden­ted political crisis on Oct 26 when he fired Wickremesi­nghe and appointed contentiou­s former strongman Mahinda Rajapakse in his place.

There was no immediate comment from either Sirisena or Rajapakse. However, Rajapakse’s legislator son, Namal, told reporters outside the court house that they did not agree with the verdict.

“We do not agree with the decision of the court, but we do not have a higher court to appeal to,” he said.

The leftist JVP, or the People’s Liberation Front, said the sacking of the prime minister in October was a “coup orchestrat­ed by Sirisena and Rajapakse” and called for a resolution in parliament to bring them to justice.

“This first thing this (restored) parliament should is to investigat­e the coup and bring both the president and his illegal prime minister to justice,” JVP leader Anura Kumara Dissanayak­e said.

Wickremesi­nghe’s United National Party ( UNP) welcomed the verdict as a victory for democracy. “As a country we have to be joyful that we have an independen­t judiciary that acted as a check on an errant executive,” UNP deputy leader Sajith Premadasa said.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Wickremesi­nghe speaks to members of parliament during a parliament session in Colombo.
— AFP photo Wickremesi­nghe speaks to members of parliament during a parliament session in Colombo.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia