Sri Lanka’s attorney general refuses to endorse sacking of PM

Published November 1, 2018
Women walks past posters of Sri Lanka's sacked Prime Minister Ranil Wickeremsinghe in Colombo, Sri Lanka on Wednesday. — AP
Women walks past posters of Sri Lanka's sacked Prime Minister Ranil Wickeremsinghe in Colombo, Sri Lanka on Wednesday. — AP

COLOMBO: Sri Lanka’s attorney general on Wednesday refused to endorse the president’s dismissal of the prime minister for a former strongman accused of rights abuses, the clearest sign yet the move may be unconstitutional.

The country has been locked in a tense standoff between two rivals claiming to head Sri Lanka’s government since Prime minister Ranil Wickremesinghe’s shock sacking last Friday.

The president and parliamentary speaker held emergency talks on Wednesday in a bid to work out a compromise and avoid a showdown, official sources close to both sides told AFP.

The crisis talks came after Attorney General Jayantha Jayasuriya cast fresh doubt on the legality of President Maithripala Sirisena’s actions, declining to endorse them.

Jayasuriya’s refusal bolstered Wickremesinghe’s claim that the president acted outside the constitution by dumping him for Mahinda Rajapakse, a former president who ruled with an iron fist for a decade.

Wickremesinghe has refused to leave the prime minister’s official residence and demanded Sirisena reconvene parliament so MPs can vote for a leader and end the constitutional crisis.

Sirisena had resisted international pressure to revoke his suspension of parliament for 20 days while his appointee Rajapakse has assumed his duties, naming a new cabinet and addressing bureaucrats at the finance ministry on Wednesday.

“Having regard to the role of the Attorney General under the constitution, I am of the view that expressing an opinion on the said questions would be deemed inappropriate,” said Jayasuriya, the government’s top legal adviser.

Sri Lanka’s parliamentary speaker had asked Jayasuriya to provide his legal opinion as pressure builds on Sirisena to resolve the nearly week-long impasse that has left one dead in clashes.

Journalists targeted

Sri Lanka’s journalists have been caught in the power struggle between the warring leaders.

Reporters without Borders (RSF) said supporters of Rajapakse, whose tenure was marred by allegations of rights violations and corruption, stormed state-owned media institutions shortly after his appointment late Friday night, roughing up ministers and journalists who then had to be rescued by police commandos.

“The violence with which Mahinda Rajapakse’s bully boys took over the state media is absolutely unacceptable,” RSF said, adding that the crisis recalled the “darkest hours of the Rajapakse presidency between 2005 and 2015”.

“We call on all parties to act responsibly by guaranteeing journalists’ safety and by respecting their editorial independence, so that impartial news coverage is available to the public.” Journalists say that state media has largely become pro-Rajapakse while private networks have kept up a low-level coverage of Wickremesinghe.

During Rajapakse’s tenure, 17 journalists and media workers were killed, according to rights organisations.

Published in Dawn, November 1st, 2018

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