Sri Lanka president sacks prime minister, appoints Rajapaksa
Former Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa has been sworn in as prime
minister after the country's president sacked incumbent Ranil
Wickremesinghe, in a surprise move that threatens political turmoil in
the Indian Ocean nation.

The appointment was confirmed in a statement from President Maithripala
Sirisena's office on Friday, but Wickremesinghe later insisted he
remained the prime minister.
"I retain the confidence of the house. I am the prime minister and I have the majority," Wickremesinghe told local media.
"According to the constitution, I'm the prime minister. That [ousting] is not legal."
Sirisena, who was health minister under Rajapaksa from 2010 to 2014,
joined forces with Wickremesinghe to defeat the former president in
elections in January 2015.
He was elected as president largely thanks to the backing of Wickremesinghe's United National Party (UNP).
WATCH: Rajapaksa leads Sri Lanka protests, calls for government change (2:07)
But earlier on Friday, Sirisensa's United People's Freedom Alliance (UPFA) had said it would quit the ruling coalition.
The developments bring an end to a coalition government that was formed
more than three years ago on promises of economic reform and
accountability for alleged atrocities committed during Rajapaksa's
10-year rule at the close of Sri Lanka's bloody civil war.
'Instability and uncertainty'
Al Jazeera's Minelle Fernandez, reporting from Colombo, said Rajapaksa's
shock appointment has brought uncertainty to Sri Lanka amid questions
whether the president has the power to dismiss the prime minister.
"There was no inkling that this might happen. It was only after the
swearing-in that we started seeing videos and pictures of the ceremony,"
she said.
Mangala Samaraweera, the finance minister of the outgoing government,
argued that Rajapaksa's appointment was a violation of the constitution,
which was amended in 2015 to curtail the president's powers.
"This is an anti-democratic coup," Samaraweera wrote on Twitter.
Ultimately, the question of who remained prime minister was up to the parliament, analysts said.
"This has to be resolved on the floor of the parliament," said Gehan Gunatilleke, a human rights lawyer.
"The important question here is whether the prime minister enjoys the
confidence of the parliament," he told Al Jazeera. "We hope parliament
reconvenes as soon as possible.
"Now this happened late on a Friday evening. And there is a sense this
was timed so the [Sirisena-bloc] gets a few days before parliament
reconvenes to get the required numbers."
Paikiasothy Saravanamuttu, executive director at the Centre for Policy
Alternatives, a Colombo-based think-tank, said Rajapaksa "would not have
made the decision if he did not have the numbers".
"We are in a bit of a grey area at the moment. Until a new government is
sworn in, there will be a certain amount of instability and
uncertainty," he told Al Jazeera.
Mahinda Amaraweera, a presidential aide, told The Associated Press news
agency that Rajapaksa has the majority needed in the 225-member
parliament to run a stable government.
Strained relations
Relations between Sirisena and Wickremesinghe have soured since their
parties suffered humiliating losses to Rajapaksa's party in February's
local council elections.
The pair have disagreed over economic policy and day-to-day
administration of the government. Last week, they reportedly clashed
during a cabinet session over plans to lease a container terminal to
neighbouring India.
Earlier this year, Sirisena reneged on a pledge not to run for
re-election, sparking tensions with Wickremesinghe who is believed to
have his own presidential ambitions.
Sirisena is also thought to be behind a failed attempt to impeach
Wickremesinghe in April, when 122 legislators in the 225-member
parliament voted to back the now-sacked prime minister.
The ruling coalition has been further strained in recent days by strong
criticism from Sirisena and his allies that ministers from
Wickremesinghe's party did not act properly in investigating an alleged
assassination plot to kill the president and former Defence Secretary
Gotabaya Rajapaksa, the new prime minister's younger brother.
Rajapaksa, who served as president from 2005 to 2015, put down the
decades-old Tamil Tiger separatist struggle in May 2009 through a
military assault that killed up to 40,000 ethnic Tamil civilians,
according to rights groups.
His government was also accused of corruption and murdering political opponents.
Sirisena had pledged accountability for war atrocities, but has faced
international criticism for being slow to deliver on justice.
International rights groups have called for the prosecution of both the
military and the Tigers, who were notorious for suicide bombings and
enlisting child soldiers.
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