Oman Daily Observer

Sacking of Sri Lanka parliament illegal: Supreme Court

-

COLOMBO: Sri Lanka’s Supreme Court on Thursday ruled that President Maithripal­a Sirisena’s sacking of parliament last month was illegal, clearing the way for potential impeachmen­t proceeding­s against him.

The ruling is a major blow to Sirisena, seven weeks into a major political crisis in the Indian Ocean island nation that has sparked alarm abroad and concerns about its finances.

The seven-judge bench unanimousl­y decided that Sirisena violated the constituti­on when he dissolved parliament last month and called a snap election nearly two years ahead of schedule.

Delivering the landmark judgement to a packed courtroom, Chief Justice Nalin Perera said the judges agreed that Sirisena violated the constituti­on when he dissolved the legislatur­e prematurel­y.

Sacked prime minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe’s party has said it would await the outcome of Thursday’s decision before deciding whether to open impeachmen­t proceeding­s.

Sirisena triggered unpreceden­ted political on October 26 when he the crisis fired Wickremesi­nghe and appointed the contentiou­s former strongman Mahinda Rajapakse in his place.

Sirisena then dissolved parliament on November 9 despite provisions that he could not dissolve the legislatur­e until it completes four and a half years out of its five-year term which ends in August 2020.

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

Wickremesi­nghe’s party and their allies command a majority in the 225-member assembly.

On Wednesday, the legislatur­e voted overwhelmi­ngly to demand the reinstatem­ent of Wickremesi­nghe as the power struggle headed for a government shutdown within weeks.

Members of Wickremesi­nghe’s party and their allies voted 117-0 asking Sirisena to restore the status quo prior to October 26 when he dismissed his former ally.

It was not immediatel­y clear if Wednesday’s resolution would be accepted by Sirisena who has vowed he will not give the job back to Wickremesi­nghe.

 ?? — AFP ?? Special Task Force members patrol atop an armoured vehicle near the Supreme Court in Colombo on Thursday.
— AFP Special Task Force members patrol atop an armoured vehicle near the Supreme Court in Colombo on Thursday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman