Democracy back in Lanka
The resignation of Mahinda Rajapaksa as Prime Minister of Sri Lanka was a step long overdue.
The resignation of Mahinda Rajapaksa as Prime Minister of Sri Lanka was a step long overdue. The restoration of democracy was all too important and the Supreme Court ruled decisively in favour of the parliamentary majority as proved by former PM Ranil Wickremesinghe. President Maithripala Sirisena had been taking his island nation dangerously close to becoming a banana republic in his refusal to heed the will of Parliament. His manoeuvring of former President Rajapaksa into the PM’s seat by dismissing Mr Wickremesinghe was a vile act against the spirit and letter of the Constitution.
The only bizarre explanation the President could have given for the sensational changes he made in governance on October 26 was that the popular vote in the February local government polls was overwhelmingly in favour of the power-monger Rajapaksa. In illegally calling for national elections on the basis of perceived popularity of a permanent contender for power, the President may have been induced by a foreign power too. As observers, India as well as the United States could only tender well-meaning advice as these were strictly internal affairs of a sovereign nation. If there is a swing in favour of Mr Rajapaksa, who has now moved away from the party his father founded, he must prove it in national elections properly called. The President could also not legally deny Mr Wickremesinghe the benefit of the confidence of duly elected Parliament that he enjoys. Personal animus cannot determine who will be PM.