BFF-07 Sri Lanka crisis deepens as PM resists sacking

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SRILANKA-POLITICS

Sri Lanka crisis deepens as PM resists sacking

COLOMBO, Oct 27, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Sri Lanka’s president issued a formal
notice Saturday for Ranil Wickremesinghe to step down as prime minister and
recognise his shock dismissal, in an unfolding constitutional crisis.

Hours after sacking his former ally, President Maithripala Sirisena issued
gazettes formalising the dramatic move, and the installation of one-time
strongman president Mahinda Rajapakse as the new prime minister.

However, Wickremesinghe continued to occupy Temple Trees, the official
residence of the prime minister, and insisted in a letter to Sirisena that he
was still in office.

He has said that he can be removed only by parliament where his party
enjoys a majority, and also vowed to seek legal action against what he
condemned as an unconstitutional move against him.

“I am addressing you as the prime minister of Sri Lanka,” Wickremesinghe
told reporters at a nationally televised press conference on Friday night. “I
remain as prime minister and I will function as the prime minister.”

Since his rushed swearing in, Rajapakse is yet to announce the formation of
a cabinet — which under the constitution is automatically dissolved when a
prime minister is removed.

Parliamentary Speaker Karu Jayasuriya has said he will decide Saturday
whether to recognise Rajapakse or not, after seeking legal advice.

Parliament is not due to meet until November 5 when the 2019 national
budget is due to be presented. The Supreme Court, which is empowered to
resolve constitutional disputes, is shut for the weekend and reopens on
Monday.

The president’s United People’s Freedom Alliance party had earlier Friday
quit the coalition that had governed with Wickremesinghe’s party.

Speaking to jubilant supporters outside his Colombo home late Friday,
Rajapakse also called on Wickremesinghe to step down.

Members of his party must “respect democracy, respect the country and
respect the law”, the former president said through a loudhailer from a
balcony.

– US urges calm –

Overnight, Rajapakse loyalists stormed two state-owned television networks
— which they regard as loyal to the outgoing government — and forced them
off the air.

Video footage from private networks showed police overwhelmed by mobs at
the Rupavahini national TV station but elsewhere in the capital streets
remained calm. The United States called on all sides in Sri Lanka to operate
within the constitution and refrain from violence, and urged the island to
move forward on post-war reconciliation.

Rajapakse crushed the decades-long Tamil Tiger uprising while in power, but
refused to acknowledge abuses committed during the bloody civil war.

“We call on all parties to act in accordance with Sri Lanka’s constitution,
refrain from violence and follow due process,” the State Department said.

“We expect the government of Sri Lanka to uphold its Geneva commitments to
human rights, reform, accountability, justice and reconciliation.”

After Sirisena’s election in 2015, Sri Lanka shifted from confrontation to
conciliation with the US and other Western powers and promised at the UN
Human Rights Council in Geneva to investigate allegations of abuses.

BSS/AFP/SSS/0848 hrs