Sri Lanka president suspends parliament amid political crisis

HOA
By HOA
2 Min Read

Hours after Sri Lanka President Maithripala Sirisena sacked Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe and replaced him with opposition leader Mahinda Rajapakse, he has suspended the South Asian country’s parliament.

“The president has prorogued the parliament with effect from 12 noon on Saturday,” cabinet spokesman Rajitha Senaratne told reporters.

Parliamentary officials said the president had suspended all meetings of the 225-member house until November 16, AFP news agency reported.

The move came after Wickremesinghe, who said he remains prime minister, urged the speaker to convene the parliament on Sunday to prove he still retained his parliamentary majority.

Sri Lanka was plunged in a constitutional crisis after Sirisena sacked Wickremesinghe and gave the job to former president Rajapakse, who was sworn in on Friday night.

Reports said supporters of Rajapakse stormed several state media institutions and intimidated staff after he was sworn in.

In a surprise move that threatens political turmoil in Sri Lanka, Sirisena dismissed the incumbent Wickremesinghe, who was away touring the south of the country.

Wickremesinghe insisted he remained the prime minister.

“I retain the confidence of the house. I am the prime minister and I have the majority,” Wickremesinghe said on Friday.

“According to the constitution, I’m the prime minister. That [removal] is not legal,” he said.

Sirisena, who was health minister under Rajapaksa from 2010 to 2014, joined forces with Wickremesinghe to defeat the former president in elections in January 2015.

He was elected president on the backing of Wickremesinghe’s United National Party (UNP). On Friday, Sirisensa’s United People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA) said it would quit the ruling coalition.

The developments bring an end to a coalition government that was formed more than three years ago on promises of economic reform and accountability for alleged atrocities committed during Rajapaksa’s 10-year rule at the close of Sri Lanka’s bloody civil war.

 

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