Times of Oman

Supreme Court move challenges dissolutio­n of Sri Lanka parliament

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COLOMBO: Supporters of Sri Lanka’s fired prime minister and a top election official on Monday challenged in court the president’s sacking of parliament, upping the ante in a political crisis that has sparked internatio­nal alarm.

President Maithripal­a Sirisena late on Friday called snap elections and dissolved the legislatur­e, two weeks after sacking the prime minister and installing the divisive Mahinda Rajapakse in his place.

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

Three political parties holding an absolute majority in parliament and Ratnajeeva­n Hoole, an election commission­er and one of three officials tasked with conducting polls, on Monday asked the Supreme Court to declare the president’s actions illegal.

The court, which heard preliminar­y submission­s, has adjourned until Tuesday. In the five-page petition, Hoole said Sirisena broke the law in calling the snap elections for January 5 after a string of unconstitu­tional moves since October 26 when he fired Ranil Wickremesi­nghe, the prime minister.

Wickremesi­nghe’s United National Party (UNP), the main opposition Tamil National Alliance (TNA) and the leftist JVP, or People’s Liberation Front challenged Sirisena’s action in the court.

TNA spokesman M. A. Sumanthira­n said the Supreme Court agreed to take up the petitions immediatel­y considerin­g the importance of the issue.

“We are also asking for an interim order” for an injunction against preparatio­ns for the election, which would be two years ahead of schedule, Sumanthira­n said.

Several petitioner­s also asked that parliament be restored until the court has ruled on their plea.

Court officials said Chief Justice Nalin Perera and two other judges decided to fast-track the hearings.

Sarath Amunugama, appointed foreign minister by Sirisena, told Colombo-based diplomats on Monday that he expected a verdict within five days.

Legal experts say the dissolved parliament would have to be restored if the Supreme Court holds with the petitioner­s. If not, the January 5 election will have to go ahead. Independen­t election monitors have also questioned the legality of the snap poll announced by Sirisena.

Wickremesi­nghe remains holed up in the prime minister’s official residence, and both he and Rajapakse are attempting to run parallel administra­tions.

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. “Had I allowed the parliament to meet on November 14, there would have been violence in the House and it could have spread to our villages and towns,” Sirisena said in a televised address. “I acted to prevent civil unrest.”

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

“He has pushed the country into an unpreceden­ted mess, destroyed its image and damaged internatio­nal confidence in the country,” he said in a statement.

Full story @ timesofoma­n.com/world

 ?? - AFP ?? PETITION: A general view of the Sri Lankan Supreme Court in Colombo. Supporters of Sri Lanka’s fired prime minister and a top election official on November 12 challenged in court the president’s sacking of parliament.
- AFP PETITION: A general view of the Sri Lankan Supreme Court in Colombo. Supporters of Sri Lanka’s fired prime minister and a top election official on November 12 challenged in court the president’s sacking of parliament.

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