COLOMBO: Former Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa called on Monday for parliament to be dissolved and fresh elections to be held after a party backed by him won local council polls in the strongest rebuff yet to the unity government.
The national election is not due until 2020 and under the constitution President Maithripala Sirisena can bring the vote forward only after two-thirds of parliament endorses it.But Rajapaksa, who crushed the Tamil Tiger rebels in a 26-year civil war before he was ousted in 2015, said the coalition government led by Sirisena’s party and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremasinghe’s group had lost the people’s confidence. “These results show people want a change now. The government has lost its mandate,” he told a news conference. Rajapaksa’s Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) won control of 231 local councils out of a total 340 while Wickremasinghe’s centre-right United National Party (UNP) took 34 councils and the rest were split among other parties. The political uncertainty hurt sentiment on the Colombo Stock Exchange index, pushing it down 0.37 percent at close.
Russia has said from the outset that it believes Ukraine was linked to the attack
The bill would give mentally competent adults who have been diagnosed with a terminal condition
Leftist opposition parties submitted a censure motion against the conservative government this week
The ministry alleged that the driver lost control and collided with barriers on the bridge
Republican Speaker Mike Johnson has held up a bill for months that would supply $60 billion in military and financial...
The results are likely to be shaped in part by economic woes driven by rampant inflation