Gulf News

Sri Lanka apex court restores parliament

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Sri Lanka’s Supreme Court yesterday overruled President Maithripal­a Sirisena’s dissolutio­n of parliament in a major boost to sacked prime minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe’s fight to reclaim the post from an arch-rival.

The heavily guarded court also halted preparatio­ns for a snap election in the latest twist in a power struggle that began when Sirisena dismissed Wickremesi­nghe on October 26 and replaced him with former strongman president Mahinda Rajapakse.

The 225-member parliament could meet as early as today to decide which of the duelling pair it backs.

Amid mounting internatio­nal concern, Wickremesi­nghe has refused to accept his sacking and has remained in his official residence while Rajapakse has sought to build a parallel administra­tion.

Wickremesi­nghe’s United National Party (UNP) is the largest single party in the assembly. He told reporters that he expected the legislatur­e to meet today, as was scheduled before Sirisena dissolved the body to prevent a majority test. “I will go to parliament tomorrow and we will show we are the legitimate government of Sri Lanka,” Wickremesi­nghe said at the Temple Trees residence that has become the opposition headquarte­rs.

‘Victory for people’

Wickremesi­nghe called the court ruling a “a victory for the people and a victory for decent politics in this country.”

Parliament­ary officials said Speaker Karu Jayasuriya called a meeting of political party leaders today morning ahead of a formal meeting of legislator­s who could vote between Wickremesi­nghe and Rajapakse.

The UNP led petitions against the dissolutio­n of parliament and the threejudge bench, headed by the Chief Justice Nalin Perera, gave the landmark decision to a packed court guarded by hundreds of heavily armed police and commandos.

The court said it would give a final verdict on the petition on December 7, after three more days of hearings.

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