The Borneo Post

Sirisena names new cabinet after final dispute with PM

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COLOMBO: Sri Lanka’s President Maithripal­a Sirisena named a 30-member cabinet yesterday to end a crippling seven-week power struggle with his prime minister, but only after a final tussle over who should control the police.

Sirisena reinstated Ranil Wickremesi­nghe as prime minister on Sunday after the Supreme Court threw out his attempt to dissolve parliament and hold early elections in the Indian Ocean nation.

“The forming of the cabinet was delayed because the president wanted to retain media and the police,” government spokesman Rajitha Senaratne said as the new cabinet was announced.

“He conceded the media ministry, but will retain control over the police for a little longer.”

No law and order minister was named in the new cabinet and Sirisena, who also serves as defence minister, will take responsibi­lity for the police.

The key posts of finance minister and foreign minister remained unchanged from

The forming of the cabinet was delayed because the president wanted to retain media and the police. He conceded the media ministry, but will retain control over the police for a little longer. Rajitha Senaratne, government spokesman

Wickremesi­nghe’s deposed government. Mangala Samaraweer­a stays as finance minister and Tilak Marapana as foreign chief.

Sirisena sparked the political crisis on Oct 26 when he sacked Wickremesi­nghe in a bid to name nationalis­t firebrand Mahinda Rajapakse as prime minister. He had to backtrack in the face of opposition from the legislatur­e, where he had no majority, and Sri Lankan courts.

Shortly after giving Wickremesi­nghe his job back on Sunday, Sirisena made it clear that working with the new government would be difficult.

“I still believe that I should not have made Ranil Wickremesi­nghe the prime minister, but I bow to the wishes of the majority in parliament. But, I don’t know how far we will succeed in fulfilling the wishes of our people,” Sirisena said.

Sirisena came to power in 2015 with the help of Wickremesi­nghe’s United National Party ( UNP), but personal and political clashes came to a head with the October sacking.

The 69-year-old Wickremesi­nghe refused to give way to former president Rajapakse, leaving the country with two claimants to the prime minister’s post and no functionin­g government.

The Sri Lankan parliament backed Wickremesi­nghe’s claim that his dismissal was illegal, voting six times against Rajapakse during tumultuous sessions that at times erupted into brawls.

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