Oman Daily Observer

Angry Lankans rally to support ousted PM, denounce ‘coup’

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COLOMBO: More than 10,000 protesting supporters of Sri Lanka’s ousted prime minister, Ranil Wickremesi­nghe, brought parts of the capital, Colombo, to a standstill on Tuesday as political turmoil on the island entered its fifth day. Sri Lanka was plunged into crisis on Friday when President Maithripal­a Sirisena sacked Wickremesi­nghe and swore in expresiden­t Mahinda Rajapakse to replace him, breaking up a fragile coalition governing the country.

Sirisena also suspended parliament, to the fury of Wickremesi­nghe’s supporters, who say the president is trying to prevent lawmakers from keeping him in power. On Tuesday, thousands of protesters gathered near Wickremesi­nghe’s residence to hear the ousted prime minister speak, holding signs demanding that Sirisena to preserve democracy.

“He has broken his promise and taken the executive powers into his hands,” Wickremesi­nghe told the crowd, referring to Sirisena. “He has sidelined parliament­ary power.”

The crowd, which police estimated at more than 10,000, blocked several roads in the city-centre neighbourh­ood that includes embassies, high-end stores and hotels, according to a Reuters witness.

“This is a coup. It has all the characteri­stics of a coup,” one of the protesters, Deepanjali­e Abeywarden­e, said, while holding a sign which read “reconvene the parliament.”

“This is a third-grade act by Sirisena. We voted him as the president to ensure democracy,” said P Ariyadasa, a 62-yearold farmer from Mesawachch­iya, 230 km from Colombo.

LEGAL WRANGLE Sirisena maintains his sacking of Wickremesi­nghe without the approval of parliament was constituti­onal.

The government’s new spokesman, Mahinda Samarasing­he, told a news conference that Sirisena had met foreign diplomats on Monday and told them the constituti­on allowed for the removal of Wickremesi­nghe. Sirisena named a new cabinet on Monday with Rajapakse in charge of finance. Rajapakse’s crushing of a 26-year insurgency by ethnic Tamil separatist­s in 2009 won him support among the island nation’s Sinhalese majority, and he has a strong following.

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