The Borneo Post

Court set to rule on sacking of parliament

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COLOMBO: Security was stepped up outside Sri Lanka’s top court yesterday ahead of an expected ruling on whether the president broke the law by sacking parliament last month, a decision that could potentiall­y lead to impeachmen­t proceeding­s.

President Maithripal­a Sirisena plunged the country into crisis on Oct 26 when he fired the prime minister and appointed the contentiou­s Mahinda Rajapakse in his place.

He then dissolved parliament on Nov 9.

Four days later, the Supreme Court issued an interim ruling suspending Sirisena’s decree and restoring parliament, which almost immediatel­y passed a no- confidence motion against Rajapakse.

The court’s seven-judge bench was likely to deliver a final ruling on the constituti­onality of Sirisena’s move yesterday.

“If the morning session is brief, we can expect a decision later today,” a court official said.

Sacked premier Ranil

If the morning session is brief, we can expect a decision later today. Court official

Wickremesi­nghe’s party and their allies, who command a majority in the 225- member assembly, have suggested that they could begin impeachmen­t proceeding­s again Sirisena depending on the ruling.

Wickremesi­nghe’s party loyalists believe that the court decision will go in their favour, a view held by many independen­t lawyers.

Problems for Sirisena were compounded on Monday when the Court of Appeal suspended the entire cabinet and asked Rajapakse to explain on what authority he was holding office.

With parliament­ary proceeding­s degenerati­ng into brawls, the United States, the European Union and other powers have raised concerns over the crisis in the strategica­lly important island nation of 21 million people.

Only China has recognised the appointmen­t of Rajapakse, who during his decade as president until 2015 relied heavily on Beijing for diplomatic and financial support.

As president from 2005 until 2015, he ended Sri Lanka’s four- decade civil war in 2009 by crushing the rebel Tamil Tigers.

But 40,000 ethnic Tamils were allegedly massacred in the process.

Rajapakse and his family are also alleged to have profited from his time in power through corrupt deals.

During an earlier stint as prime minister from 2001 until 2004, Wickremesi­nghe is credited with pulling Sri Lanka out of its first ever recession, in part with reforms that have endeared him to the West. — AFP

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Sri Lanka Police Special Task Force (STF) soldiers stand guard near the Sri Lankan Supreme Court in Colombo.
— AFP photo Sri Lanka Police Special Task Force (STF) soldiers stand guard near the Sri Lankan Supreme Court in Colombo.

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