BFF-17 Sri Lanka parties challenge president in court

308

ZCZC

BFF-17

SRILANKA-POLITICS-COURT-WRAP

Sri Lanka parties challenge president in court

COLOMBO, Nov 12, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Sri Lanka’s main parties on Monday
challenged in the highest court the president’s sacking of parliament, a move
which has escalated a political crisis and deepened international alarm.

President Maithripala Sirisena late Friday called snap elections for
January 5 and dismissed parliament, two weeks after sacking the prime
minister and installing the divisive Mahinda Rajapakse in his place.

Three parties, which together enjoy an absolute majority in the assembly,
on Monday asked the Supreme Court to declare the president’s actions as
illegal.

Sacked premier Ranil Wickremesinghe’s United National Party (UNP), the main
opposition Tamil National Alliance (TNA) and the leftist JVP, or People’s
Liberation Front, were among 10 groups that filed the action, officials said.

“The petitions were accepted this morning and it is up to the Chief Justice
to decide when it will be taken up for hearing,” a court official said.

He said several civil society groups and individuals too had submitted
separate petitions, all seeking a declaration against the presidential action
against the legislature.

On Sunday, the speaker of parliament, Karu Jayasuriya, urged civil servants
to defy Sirisena’s “illegal orders”.

“I have watched over the last two weeks as the executive branch has seized
the rights and usurped the powers of members of parliament who were elected
to represent the people,” he said.

“We must all act with patriotism and independence to safeguard the future
of democracy in our country.”

– ‘Civil unrest’ –

The same day, Sirisena said violent clashes among rival MPs could have led
to “civil unrest” across the country if the legislature had met as scheduled
this week.

“Had I allowed the parliament to meet on November 14, there would have been
violence in the House and it could have spread to our villagers and towns,”
Sirisena said in his first address to the nation since the crisis erupted on
Friday.

“I acted to prevent civil unrest.”

Sirisena’s rivals maintain that he had no constitutional power to sack the
assembly until it completed four-and-a-half years of its five-year term that
ends in August 2020.

Only China has recognised the appointment of Rajapakse, who during his
decade as president relied heavily on Beijing for both diplomatic and
financial support as the West shunned him over his human rights record.

The United States has led a chorus of international voices expressing
concern over threats to democracy on the island of 21 million people
strategically located in the Indian Ocean.

Election monitors have questioned the legality of the snap poll announced
by Srisena.

The People’s Action for Free and Fair Elections said it had already asked
the independent Elections Commission to seek an opinion from the attorney
general and an order from the Supreme Court.

BSS/AFP/MR/ 1140 hrs