Arab News

Sri Lankan PM quits to end political deadlock

- Mohammed Rasooldeen Colombo

Embattled Sri Lankan Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa resigned on Saturday after calling for general elections to end the political deadlock that has left the country without a functionin­g government.

Rajapaksa signed his resignatio­n letter surrounded by party supporters at his home in Colombo 7. Clergy from the island’s three major religions chanted verses to bless Rajapaksa following his decision to step down.

“I will resign from the position of prime minister and make way for the president to form a new government,” Rajapaksa said.

Sri Lanka has been in political crisis since October when President Maithripal­a Sirisena sacked then Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe and named Rajapaksa as his replacemen­t. The country’s Parliament has twice rejected the appointmen­t.

Rajapaksa, a former president, is considered a war hero by some for defeating the Tamil Tiger rebels in 2009 after a long civil war. He lost a 2015 re-election bid after facing allegation­s of wartime atrocities and corruption.

Rajapaksa’s resignatio­n comes a day after the Supreme Court extended a lower court’s suspension of the prime minister and his Cabinet.

Sri Lanka has had no functionin­g government for almost two weeks and faces the prospect of being unable to pass a budget for next year.

According

to

Akila

Viraj Kariyawasa­m, general secretary of the ruling United National Party, former premier Wickremesi­nghe will return to be sworn in as prime minister on Sunday and form a new Cabinet.

In a speech to party supporters, Rajapaksa said that he had no intention of remaining in power unless a general election was held.

“We are now in direct confrontat­ion with a group of political parties that has engaged in various subterfuge­s to avoid facing elections,” he said.

“What we are confronted with is an attempt to rule the country without holding any kind of election. We cannot implement any of the measures we had planned to prevent this country from becoming another Greece.”

The UNP government has taken out $20.7 billion in foreign currency loans over the past four years, but the political deadlock leaves questions about how the borrowing will be repaid.

Rajapaksa said that Sri Lanka’s people would one day “definitely get the change they desire.”

Seyed Ali Zahir Moulana, a legislator and former diplomat in the US, welcomed Rajapaksa’s resignatio­n. “It proves that democracy is still alive in Sri Lanka,” he said.

Rajapaksa’s appointmen­t had plunged the country into chaos, he said.

“Violence was seen erupting in the temple of democracy, the Parliament of Sri Lanka, and its members were seen stooping to the lowest levels of conduct ... to disrupt and agitate,” the analyst said.

However, despite a barrage of attacks on the constituti­onal principles of the state, the judiciary and legislatur­e had stayed resilient and independen­t. “If there was anything deserving of praise in the past seven weeks, it is the harmonious functionin­g of these institutio­ns,” he said.

Azath Salley, a political commentato­r and leader of the National Unity Alliance, said that Rajapaksa’s resignatio­n had ended the “ordeal of the people.”

 ?? Mahinda Rajapaksa ??
Mahinda Rajapaksa

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