Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

To disagree as MoU

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tion had earlier expected to do some tough talking on the assumption that Sirisena may entertain reservatio­ns. Wickremesi­nghe began quoting the powers of the Prime Minister vis-a-vis the Constituti­on on removing a Cabinet minister. Sirisena cut him short politely with a remark that “Rajapakshe is creating trouble, isn’t he?” He then set out the procedure to be followed. The UNPers were pleased. One of them said, “H.E. (His Excellency) was in a very good mood.”

The procedure Sirisena set out for the expulsion of Rajapakshe was that the UNP should write to him citing the Working Committee decision to remove the Minister. He also wanted the UNP to issue a public statement giving details including the fact that it had requested the President to remove him. In doing so, Sirisena was clinical enough to ensure that there was no finger pointing at him over the Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe issue. It was the UNP, which had nominated him and it was now seeking his removal. By Tuesday morning, UNP General Secretary Kabir Hashim had written to Sirisena and also issued a statement. His statement said:

“At the United National Party’s (UNP) Working Committee meeting held last Thursday (August 17), a charge was levelled against Hon. Minister Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe that he has been continuous­ly violating the collective responsibi­lity of the party and the Cabinet in recent times. Accordingl­y, it was unanimousl­y agreed that he should be given until Monday (August 21) to correct these statements, failing which he should be removed from his Cabinet Ministeria­l post.

“The Working Committee discussed the matter with party Chairman Malik Samarawick­rama and informed Mr Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe to take necessary measures to correct his earlier statements. He agreed to this. However, he then violated this agreement and failed to correct his statements. Moreover, he continued to criticise Ministers from his party and the policies of the Government during the weekend, further violating collective responsibi­lity of the Cabinet.

“Given this situation, Mr Rajapakshe has failed to adhere to the decision of the party’s Working Committee and has continued to criticise Government Ministers and Government policies. As such, the UNP Leadership has informed the President to remove him from all his Ministeria­l portfolios in line with the party’s Working Committee decision.”

Sirisena had on Tuesday forwarded Hashim’s statement to Rajapakshe in a bid to persuade him to resign. The Minister did not attend Tuesday’s weekly Cabinet meeting. With no response from him, Sirisena signed a proclamati­on removing him from the Justice and Buddha Sasana portfolios. Talatha Athukorale was sworn in as Justice Minister on Friday and Gamini Jayawickre­ma Perera as the Minister of Buddha Sasana. Rajapakshe had planned a political show of strength over his sacking. Though a larger turnout was expected at the Justice Ministry when he visited it for the last time as Minister, the numbers were smaller. There, he seized the opportunit­y to accuse the UNP leadership of “illegally” handing over to the Chinese the Hambantota Port. He also charged that some UNP leaders were involved in the Central Bank bond scam and he would fight to expose them. The learned President’s Counsel also opined that signing an agreement with the Chinese company for the Hambantota Port was in violation of the Constituti­on. He claimed that such a move required a two-thirds majority of Parliament.

Mahanayake­s briefed on UNP position

Making matters worse was another factor. The meeting of the UNP Working Committee that was held on Thursday (August 17) coincided with a statement issued by Most Venerable Warakagoda Sri Gnanaratan­a Thera, the Mahanayake of the Asgiriya Chapter, that they were opposed to the No-Confidence Motion then contemplat­ed against the Buddha Sasana Minister. Premier Wickremesi­nghe was concerned over the reactions of the Buddhist clergy. UNP leaders were speaking on the phone to some of them to explain the situation.

Wickremesi­nghe dispatched UNP Chairman, his confidant and point man Minister Malik Samarawick­rema for meetings in Kandy with the Mahanayake­s of the Malwatte and Asgiriya Chapters. Samarawick­rema was to later report back to the Prime Minister that the two prelates had appreciate­d the Government’s position and endorsed the action to be taken. More details of Wickremesi­nghe’s meeting with Rajapakshe after the Working Committee and parliament­ary group meeting ended have emerged. The Premier is learnt to have told Rajapakshe that he could keep the Buddha Sasana Ministry and could opt to take on another portfolio. This is if Rajapakshe expressed regrets for his conduct and apologised. However, the Minister had rejected the offer.

Earlier, last Monday evening Premier Wickremesi­nghe chaired a meeting of the UNP parliament­ary group. Much of the time was devoted to parliament­ary business the next day (Tuesday). Wickremesi­nghe made an important announceme­nt -- all MPs will receive Rs 20 million each for “infrastruc­ture developmen­t” in their respective electorate­s. He said former Foreign Minister and one-time Finance Minister Ravi Karunanaya­ke would monitor the programme and report to him periodical­ly on the progress. Government sources said the Rs 20 million payment would also go to Opposition MPs. The ‘infrastruc­ture developmen­t’ payout is just ahead of the impending local and provincial council elections. State Minister Sujeeva Senasinghe was to raise issue over Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe to be followed by Minister Harin Fernando. Wickremesi­nghe replied that the party had already taken a decision on the matter. He declared the meeting closed saying he had an engagement later with the President.

No-faith motion against Rajitha

The past weeks have seen the UNP’s standing countrywid­e taking a bad beating. It began with events relating to the resignatio­n of Ravi Karunanaya­ke as Foreign Minister. This week, Justice and Buddha Sasana Minister Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe was removed from his portfolio. Now, a third, Health Minister Rajitha Senaratne will face a Vote of No Confidence in Parliament. Due to appear in the Order Book of Parliament is the following motion:

“Since the Minister Rajitha Senaratne has refrained from taking part in the investigat­ions against him by the Commission to Investigat­e Allegation­s of Bribery or Corruption on allegation­s levelled against him by Members of Parliament and other parties, the process of implementi­ng justice has been obstructed,

“Since there is a public opinion building up that he is responsibl­e for the allegation­s, as he has refrained from taking part in the investigat­ions and clearing his name,

“Since, he is responsibl­e for creating a crisis in the Medical education in Sri Lanka by using his powers arbitraril­y to commercial­ise the medical education in Sri Lanka and sacrificin­g it to the business community,

Since, there is a misuse of public funds by using public funds to maintain a privately owned hospital with public funds after making misleading statements that the Neville Fernando hospital has been acquired by the government,

Since, as the Health Minister he has misused his powers by acting in a manner favourable to the SAITM through the Attorney General by failing to submit to the courts details in relation to a Writ Applicatio­n in the Court of Appeal case (No: 187/2016),

“Since, he has created a crisis regarding the minimum medical standards in medical education by deliberate­ly avoiding the issue of issuing the Gazette notificati­on on the minimum standards for medical education prepared by the Sri Lanka Medical Council.

“Since, the right to life of the public was put at risk by failing to promptly act during the outbreak of the Dengue epidemic and the fact that state run hospitals refused to admit Dengue patients,

“Since, there was a case of corruption and caused a financial loss to the government by purchasing pharmaceut­icals to the value of Rs. 986 million from a recently registered private firm (Armes) owned by Dilshard Ikram Mohamed who is a close relative of Rumy Mohammed, a close friend of Minister Dr Rajitha Senaratne and appointed as a Working Director of the State Pharmaceut­ical Corporatio­n to which Dr Senaratne recommende­d a drug for cancer which has been rejected by the specialist and not completed the minimum period of use before usage,

“Since he has caused a major financial loss to the state and a fraud by handing over the Modera Fisheries Harbour to a private institutio­n without following tender procedures while serving as the minister of Fisheries,

Since, he has misused his powers and obtained bribes as a minister by appointing one of his secretarie­s Lalith Anuradha Seneviratn­e to a Chinese Company named Blue Ocean Fisheries to which he issued a licence for deep sea fishing and demanded shares of the company,

“Since he has interfered in the independen­ce of judiciary by intimidati­ng and bringing pressure on the judiciary and the Attorney Generals Department,

Therefore the Parliament resolves that the confidence in Minister of Health, Nutrition and Indigenous Medicine to function as a minister has been lost. “

The No Confidence Motion came just a day after Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) leader Anura Kumara Dissanayak­e castigated Senaratne in Parliament. Speaking on the adjournmen­t motion on the drought situation. He declared, “The Health Minister says anyone can get free medicine from government hospitals as well as get tests done. Then why are there so many pharmacies and laboratori­es outside Government hospitals? There were only funeral parlours outside hospitals those days.

“If the Government health sector is functionin­g well, will the Health Minister go to Singapore for treatment? If he had faith in the local health service, will the Health Minister take Rs 10 million from the President’s Fund and go to Singapore to get treatment?

“If that is the case he should have got his surgery done at the National Hospital. Why is the Health Minister going to Singapore’s Mount Elizabeth Hospital? He should be ashamed of himself. For a man in the rural areas, to get Rs. 150,000 from the President's Fund for a heart operation, he must visit the Grama Sevaka and get a doctor’s certificat­e and the District Secretary’s certificat­ion. The Minister got Rs 10 million without any of these. How were the Matara and Modera fishery harbours given on lease? There was an investigat­ion by the Commission to Investigat­e Allegation­s of Bribery and Corruption and then he spoke to the President and got the Director General removed. His brother in law is in the Ayurveda Department. His wife is giving appointmen­ts through letters.

Those are the things to be investigat­ed. He is the only one who lost an MP post due to a court case .He must thank Ranil Wickremesi­nghe for taking him from the national list.” Speaking to reporters this week, Senaratne claimed that the contents of the motion against him were “all lies.”

With a comfortabl­e majority in Parliament, the motion is sure to be defeated. However, that is not to say that Senaratne, an official spokespers­on of the Government, will come unscathed. His credibilit­y takes a beating almost every week when he addresses the news conference after the Cabinet meeting. Disclosure­s in Parliament, even if some are right or wrong, are bound to further affect his credibilit­y. Needless to say that embarrasse­s not only the Government but also the UNP which is reeling with one political disaster after another.

This week’s political developmen­ts will no doubt have a bearing on the two coalition partners, the SLFP and the UNP. The SLFP spokespers­on at the weekly news briefings, Sports Minister Dayasiri Jayasekera, declared this week that if the UNP were to form a new Government, it would require seven more MPs. On the other hand, he said, if the SLFP (pro Sirisena) wanted to form one, it would require 17 more MPs. Thus, he said, there was no option but for the two leaders, President Sirisena and Premier Wickremesi­nghe, to continue to work together.

Much against his own wishes, ground realities project an entirely different picture. With no new MoUs to guide them, both the SLFP and the UNP are veering towards their own goals notwithsta­nding the challenges they face together. For the SLFP, the first test of strength would come when the local council and provincial council elections are held next year. Will the party remain the formidable SLFP or yield that position to the pro-Mahinda Rajapaksa group? This is its biggest worry. It has been exacerbate­d by threats from some SLFP ministers to quit in September and function as ‘independen­ts’ in Parliament – a move that could debilitate the pro-Sirisena group. An early warning signal came on Friday when Labour Minister John Seneviratn­e abstained from voting (against) an amendment moved by the ‘Joint Opposition’ on the Local Government (Amendment) Bill in Parliament.

For the UNP, which is gearing itself to contest separately, the challenges are both within and outside. From within, younger groups have been expressing frustratio­n over their inability to play a bigger role. This week, none other than a VVIP raised the query why the UNP was not nominating ‘young blood’ for ministeria­l positions and confining nominees to only very senior persons. From the outside, the outcome of the Commission of Inquiry into the Central Bank bond scam portends a devastatin­g blow. Significan­tly, it is President Sirisena who holds the key here and would have to decide whether or not to go ahead with the Commission findings. He would be in an unenviable position since his own SLFP ministers have pressured him that appointing a Commission was one thing but it was important that he should act on its findings, should they be detrimenta­l to the powers-that-be.

In essence, political necessity demands the inevitable that the SLFP and the UNP go it together or as both sides say pave the way for the return of Mahinda Rajapaksa. On the other hand, sharply differing stances every week, if not every day, make it inevitable that they would have to part someday. With many a promise unfulfille­d, how soon remains the critical question.

 ??  ?? Ousted Minister Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe manages a grin as he leaves the Justice Ministry office on Wednesday. Pic by Indika Handuwela
Ousted Minister Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe manages a grin as he leaves the Justice Ministry office on Wednesday. Pic by Indika Handuwela

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