The Citizen (KZN)

New PM for crisis-hit Sri Lanka

UNITY ADMINISTRA­TION: WICKREMESI­NGHE RETURNS TO THE TOP OFFICE FOR SIXTH TIME

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Former lawyer to help steer South Asian island nation.

Ranil Wickremesi­nghe was sworn in as Sri Lanka’s prime minister for the sixth time yesterday, though the veteran politician has never completed a full term in office.

The 73-year-old’s political career appeared to be drawing to a close before this week, when he agreed to helm a unity administra­tion and help steer the South Asian island nation through a crippling economic crisis.

“This is a historic event,” said Tamil legislator Dharmaling­am Sithadthan in reference to Wickremesi­nghe’s latest return to the top office.

“This shows the desperate situation in our country.”

Wickremesi­nghe is the sole parliament­ary representa­tive of the United National Party, a once-powerful political force that was nearly wiped out in Sri Lanka’s last elections.

The former lawyer hails from a political family and his uncle, Junius Jayewarden­e, served as president for more than a decade.

But Wickremesi­nghe once said he would have likely pursued a career as a journalist, had the government of the day not nationalis­ed his family’s newspaper business in 1973.

He was first appointed premier in 1993 after the assassinat­ion of then-president Ranasinghe Premadasa, who was killed in a bomb attack by Tamil Tiger guerrillas during Sri Lanka’s decades-long civil war.

Underscori­ng the dynastic nature of Sri Lanka’s politics, Premadasa’s son Sajith is the current opposition leader and had also been touted as a possible prime ministeria­l candidate this week.

Wickremesi­nghe’s first term in office lasted little more than a year. He returned to power in 2001, earning a reputation for sound economic management after steering the country out of recession.

Conflict with the president saw him sacked before his term was over, and he spent the next decade in the political wilderness.

Wickremesi­nghe lost two presidenti­al contests and led his party to a string of election defeats, prompting even his own supporters to dub him a “record loser”.

He was nonetheles­s sworn in as prime minister again in 2015 after the election defeat of president Mahinda Rajapaksa after the opposition rallied behind him as a unity candidate against the authoritar­ian leader.

His “Mr Clean” image was muddied later that year when his administra­tion was rocked by an insider trading scam involving central bank bonds.

 ?? Picture: AFP ?? NEW LEADER. Sri Lanka President’s Office shows the new prime minister, Ranil Wickremesi­nghe, left, at his swearing in ceremony before President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, right, in Colombo.
Picture: AFP NEW LEADER. Sri Lanka President’s Office shows the new prime minister, Ranil Wickremesi­nghe, left, at his swearing in ceremony before President Gotabaya Rajapaksa, right, in Colombo.

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