The Star Malaysia

Sri Lanka gets new Cabinet

Govt can resume functions after weeks of political crisis

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COLOMBO: Sri Lanka’s president appointed 28 lawmakers and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe as Cabinet ministers after weeks of political crisis led to government dysfunctio­n.

President Maithripal­a Sirisena administer­ed oaths yesterday in a private event. Wickremesi­nghe’s reinstatem­ent as prime minister earlier this week and the appointmen­t of a new Cabinet will result in Sri Lanka’s government resuming functions that have been obstructed since October, but continued acrimony between Sirisena and Wickremesi­nghe means the crisis is far from over.

Notably, Sirisena has not appointed a law and order minister, a crucial post for investigat­ing corruption and crime allegation­s against former strongman Mahinda Rajapaksa, his family and government members.

Wickremesi­nghe promised such investigat­ions before the 2015 elections.

Sirisena sparked the crisis in October when he suddenly sacked Wickremesi­nghe and appointed former president Rajapaksa in his place.

Wickremesi­nghe insisted he was sacked illegally and hunkered down in the prime minister’s official residence in Colombo, while Rajapaksa failed to secure majority support in Parliament in two chaotic no-confidence votes.

Sirisena dissolved Parliament and called for elections. The Supreme Court first suspended the move and later declared the dissolutio­n unconstitu­tional.

Separately, the Court of Appeal ordered Rajapaksa and his Cabinet to cease functionin­g. As a result, the newly-restored government in Sri Lanka has only 11 days left to pass a budget to provision state money in 2019.

After reappointi­ng Wickremesi­nghe, Sirisena made a speech saying he doubted that the new arrangemen­t would last long.

Sri Lankans are not due to go to the polls again until 2020, but if the government fails to function, Parliament can pass a resolution with a 2/3 vote for snap elections.

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