![]() |
| Sri Lanka s new leader delays forming cabinet |
Colombo
(AFP) - Sri Lanka's new president Monday announced fresh parliamentary
elections to be held late April, after he has implemented an ambitious 100-day
reform plan.
Maithripala
Sirisena told a 27-member cabinet inducted Monday that the election will be
held two years ahead of schedule after carrying out a series of reforms aimed
at securing his presidency following last week's presidential election.
"Soon
after our 100-day programme, we will hold a parliamentary election and remember
that this is only an interim government," he said.
"Win
over those who did not vote for us at the presidential election," he
added.
Sirisena,
who defeated strongman Mahinda Rajapakse in the presidential election also
called two years ahead of schedule, said he was keeping his promise of having a
lean cabinet of 27 compared to his predecessor's bloated 67.
Sirisena
kept the defence ministry for himself as mandated by the constitution and gave
foreign affairs to top opposition figure Mangala Samaraweera, who had held the
post under a Rajapakse administration too.
Sirisena
has promised to transfer most of the executive powers to parliament and allow
independent commissions to run the public service, the police, the judiciary
and the elections department.
Purge
underway
Sirisena
axed hundreds of officials and diplomats appointed by Rajapakse and warned that
he would take stern action against any corrupt official in his administration.
Health
Minister Rajitha Senaratne said the President had ordered all political
appointees of the former president to resign immediately, while diplomats were
being recalled.
Sirisena
invited all parties to join his cabinet on Sunday, two days after he ousted
South Asia's longest-serving leader in a surprise election victory.
The new
president quit Rajapakse's cabinet in November to emerge as a leading candidate
in the January 8 polls, uniting the opposition and triggering a mass defection
of lawmakers.
Analysts
have already warned that he may struggle to satisfy the diverse coalition that backed
his campaign.
As he got
to work on Monday, Sirisena spoke to top US diplomat John Kerry after pledging
to mend ties with the West.
The US
secretary of state said Washington wanted to strengthen its relations with Sri
Lanka, which soured under Rajapakse.
Senaratne
said the new government had secured wide support, including from parties
outside the coalition.
The main
party representing the country's Tamil minority, who played a significant role
in ousting Rajapakse, declined cabinet positions but agreed to support the
president, Senaratne said.
Sirisena,
who needs a majority in the 225-member assembly to push through ambitious
reforms, has moved to strengthen his hold on parliament by securing further
defections.
He has
pledged to reverse many of the constitutional changes made by the former
president, who gave himself huge powers over all key institutions, including
the judiciary.
Rajapakse's
Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) split on Sunday night when a section of its
policy-making central committee broke away and pledged support to Sirisena.
Irrigation
minister Duminda Dissanayake said the SLFP had appointed the new president as
party leader, though that was immediately challenged by the Rajapakse camp.
The new
president has already led the biggest defection from any government in Sri
Lanka since independence from Britain in 1948.

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.