BFF-22 Sri Lanka Tamils push parliament to end crisis

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BFF-22

SRILANKA-POLITCS

Sri Lanka Tamils push parliament to end crisis

COLOMBO, Nov 4, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Sri Lanka’s main Tamil party on Sunday
urged the president to reconvene parliament and end a worsening political
crisis, as the minority ethnic community emerge as kingmakers in the power
struggle.

The Tamil National Alliance (TNA) could tip the balance should parliament
be recalled this week to decide between two rivals both claiming the lawful
right to head Sri Lanka’s government.

Sri Lanka has been gripped by constitutional turmoil since President
Maithripala Sirisena sacked his former ally, prime minister Ranil
Wickremesinghe, and his cabinet on October 26.

Wickremesinghe says his dismissal was illegal as he commands a greater
majority in parliament than Mahinda Rajapakse, the former strongman president
controversially installed in his place.

The TNA has already said it would vote against Rajapakse in a no-
confidence motion when parliament reconvenes.

Both rivals have been marshalling numbers behind the scenes, worrying
civil society groups who protested Sunday in the capital Colombo against the
horse-trading.

TNA legislator Dharmalingam Sithadthan said the president had called the
Tamil legislators to a meeting Wednesday — the same day parliament was
expected to reconvene.

“We have asked the president to immediately call parliament and end this
crisis,” TNA legislator Dharmalingam Sithadthan told AFP.

Wickremesinghe’s party risks losing legislators to Rajapakse’s camp as the
days drag by. Some members of his party have already alleged they were
offered portfolios and huge amounts of money to switch allegiances.

Six MPs have already switched sides and been granted portfolios under
Rajapakse’s new administration.

The Sunday Times of Colombo newspaper described the sacking of the prime
minister as “sheer political expediency” and outside the law.

The state-run Sunday Observer, now controlled by Rajapakse-loyalists,
defended the change of government but acknowledged the crisis should be
resolved.

According to latest counts, Wickremesinghe has 103 MPs from the 225-seat
assembly while Rajapakse and Sirisena have 101.

Most of the remaining 21 MPs — including the TNA — are set to oppose
Rajapakse, observers said.

The Sri Lanka Muslim Congress (SLMC) party, which has seven lawmakers,
said its members had also rejected offers to join the Sirisena-Rajapakse
camp.

BSS/AFP/FI/ 1535 hrs