Gulf Today

Rajapaksa quits to end Lanka crisis

‘To ensure stability of the nation, former president ...(Rajapaksa) has decided to resign from the premiershi­p tomorrow after an address to the nation’

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COLOMBO: Sri Lanka’s strongman leader Mahinda Rajapaksa will step down from his disputed position of premier, his son said on Friday, signalling an end to a crippling seven-week long power struggle.

Rajapaksa’s legislator son Namal said he will quit on Saturday “to ensure stability of the nation,” after the Supreme Court ordered that he should not exercise the powers of the ofice he has claimed since Oct.26.

COLOMBO: Sri Lanka’s strongman leader Mahinda Rajapakse will step down on Saturday from his disputed position of premier, his son said on Friday, signalling an end to the seven-week long power-struggle that threatened to shut the government.

“To ensure stability of the nation, former president ...(Rajapakse) has decided to resign from the premiershi­p tomorrow after an address to the nation,” his legislator son Namal said.

The announceme­nt came shortly after the Supreme Court banned Rajapakse, 73, and his purported government from exercising the powers of the ofice they claimed since October.

A day earlier, the Supreme Court opened the way for potential impeachmen­t proceeding­s against President Maithripal­a Sirisena ruling that he broke the law by dissolving parliament last month.

A seven-judge bench unanimousl­y agreed that Sirisena violated the constituti­on when he dissolved parliament last month to prevent Rajapakse suffering a humiliatin­g defeat on the loor of the House.

Sirisena had also called a snap election nearly two years ahead of schedule. That was also cancelled by the courts.

Namal Rajapakse said they will join a coalition with Sirisena who triggered the political crisis on October 26 by initially sacking Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe and replacing him with former foe Rajapakse.

Two of the country’s highest courts suspended Rajapakse till he could prove his legitimacy after he failed two noconfiden­ce motions in the 225-member legislatur­e in mid-november.

The court rulings also meant that the Indian Ocean nation of 21 million people was effectivel­y without a government and heading for a shutdown raising fears among internatio­nal credit rating agencies and holders of Sri Lankan bonds.

The country was taken by surprise when Sirisena sacked Wickremesi­nghe on October 26, almost two years before his ive-year term was up and called a snap election for January 5.

Wickremesi­nghe refused to step down maintainin­g that his sacking was illegal. That issue is currently being canvassed before courts.

NEW GOVERNMENT

Political sources said Wickremesi­nghe was likely to be sworn in on Sunday morning, in a move that is expected to end the power vacuum.

There was no immediate comment from Sirisena or his ofice, but an MP from his party, Lakshman Yapa Abeywarden­a, told reporters that the president agreed to the latest measures to avoid a government shutdown after December 31.

If the stalemate continued, we would have ended up without a budget for 2019 and the government would not have been able to function,” Abeywarden­a said.

Earlier, Sirisena had refused to reinstate Wickremesi­nghe saying he had serious cultural and policy difference­s with him. However, sources close to both sides said they managed to sink their difference­s during a closed-door meeting on Thursday.

On Wednesday, the legislatur­e voted overwhelmi­ngly to demand the reinstatem­ent of Wickremesi­nghe.

The leftist JVP, or the People’s Liberation Front, insists that Sirisena should be investigat­ed for orchestrat­ing what they call a coup and that there should also be an impeachmen­t process.

 ?? Agence France-presse ?? Sri Lanka Police Special Task Force personnel stand guard near the Supreme Court in Colombo on Friday.
Agence France-presse Sri Lanka Police Special Task Force personnel stand guard near the Supreme Court in Colombo on Friday.

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