BFF-25 Sri Lanka parliament to meet in showdown between rival PMs

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ZCZC

BFF-25

SRILANKA-POLITICS-PARLIAMENT

Sri Lanka parliament to meet in showdown between rival PMs

COLOMBO, Nov 14, 2018 (BSS/AFP) – Sri Lanka’s parliament will meet under
tight security Wednesday, after the top court ruled its dissolution illegal
and opened the door to a vote on which of two rival prime ministers has the
support to rule.

Sri Lanka has been locked in a power struggle since the president sacked
prime minister Ranil Wickremesinghe on October 26 and replaced him with
former strongman president Mahinda Rajapakse.

On Tuesday the Supreme Court overruled President Maithripala Sirisena’s
dissolution of parliament, and halted preparations for a snap election, in a
major boost for the ousted prime minister.

Wickremesinghe is confident he can command a majority and wants a vote on
the floor of the 225-member assembly to determine the legitimacy of the
government installed by presidential diktat.

“Speaker Karu Jayasuriya ordered the police to ensure that MPs have free
access to parliament,” a spokesman for the Speaker told AFP. “There will be
tight security.” Thousands of armed police have been deployed along the key
approach roads to parliament, which is located on a man-made lake island,
with several anti-riot units on stand by.

Parliament officials fear that supporters of Rajapakse’s party may try to
stop legislators getting to parliament.

However, by early Wednesday there were no large crowds and only small
pockets of Wickremesinghe supporters gathered near the parliament complex.

Rajapakse’s party was divided Tuesday on facing a test in parliament. His
legislator son Namal Rajapakse said they will attend the legislature, but
other party seniors said they would not. Sirisena sacked the legislature
after his party admitted that they did not have an absolute majority despite
engineering the defections of eight legislators from Wickremesinghe’s party.

Since then, at least two legislators have ditched Rajapakse and joined
Wickremesinghe’s UNP party which insists it has a comfortable majority in the
House.

Wickremesinghe, who insists he is still the prime minister, has refused to
vacate the official Temple Trees residence which is a symbol of state power
in the island.

The power struggle has crippled the work of the administration, according
to lawmakers on both sides.

BSS/AFP/MSY/1015 hrs