Oman Daily Observer

One dead in Sri Lanka shooting as constituti­onal crisis escalates

Sacked Wickremesi­nghe gets a boost as speaker recognises him as PM

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COLOMBO: One man died and two others were injured when shots were fired on Sunday in Sri Lanka, as a constituti­onal crisis over the shock sacking of Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe turned violent.

Bodyguards for Petroleum Minister Arjuna Ranatunga fired live rounds as a mob loyal to Sri Lanka’s president besieged the cabinet member in his office, police said.

One of those shot in the melee, a 34-year-old man, died shortly after being admitted to the Colombo National, hospital spokeswoma­n Pushpa Soysa said.

It was the first report of serious violence since Sirisena sacked Wickremesi­nghe on Friday and installed former strongman Mahinda Rajapakse as the new prime minister, triggering political chaos.

Wickremesi­nghe has refused to vacate the prime minister’s official residence since being controvers­ially deposed, declaring his dismissal illegal and demanding an emergency session of parliament to prove he still commands a majority.

Over 1,000 supporters and loyalists, including chanting Buddhist monks, massed outside the colonialer­a residence in Colombo where a defiant Wickremesi­nghe has been holding crisis talks with allies.

Elsewhere his successor Mahinda Rajapakse, a former president, sought blessings at a temple ahead of naming a new cabinet, as he jostles to consolidat­e his claim to the prime ministersh­ip. Officials loyal to Rajapakse said police will now seek a court order to evict Wickremesi­nghe from the residence, threatenin­g to escalate the standoff.

Regional neighbours and Western nations have urged all sides to exercise restraint and respect the constituti­on.

Soldiers had been stationed near the prime minister’s residence — although his security and official cars were withdrawn on Saturday — but the shooting at the petroleum ministry was the first reported instance of violence breaking out.

Embattled Wickremesi­nghe received a boost on Sunday as Sri Lanka’s parliament­ary speaker Karu Jayasuriya refused to endorse his sacking.

The speaker backed the ousted prime minister’s request to retain his privileges and security until another candidate could prove a majority, saying it was “democratic and fair.”

Wickremesi­nghe called for a vote in parliament to prove his right to hold office — but instead Sirisena shut parliament for nearly three weeks to forestall any challenge against Rajapakse’s appointmen­t.

Speaker Jayasuriya warned the president that shuttering parliament risked “serious and undesirabl­e consequenc­es for the country”.

Others feared the crisis could degenerate into street violence if the president did not immediatel­y summon parliament to end the impasse.

“Don’t try to create a civil war in this country,” party legislator Karunarath­na Paranawith­ana told reporters at the prime minister’s residence.

“If the president has the numbers, he should immediatel­y call parliament and prove his majority.”

Loyalists to Rajapakse — whose controvers­ial decade-long rule was marked by grave allegation­s of rights abuses, the crushing of the Tamil Tiger uprising, and growing authoritar­ianism — still control the headquarte­rs of two state-run television channels.

The controvers­ial new prime minister travelled to a highly venerated Buddhist temple on Sunday in the central district of Kandy to seek blessings from monks.

Rajapakse’s aides said he was likely to name a few cabinet ministers before the end of the day and begin work on Monday — he is yet to make a formal statement since being elevated to the new post.

 ?? — AFP ?? Former president and new prime minister Mahinda Rajapakse gestures as he arrives at the Temple of the Sacred Tooth Relic in Kandy on Sunday.
— AFP Former president and new prime minister Mahinda Rajapakse gestures as he arrives at the Temple of the Sacred Tooth Relic in Kandy on Sunday.

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