• Sirisena appoints Cabinet members

    Despite Sri Lanka remaining at a state of political turmoil following the sacking of the prime minister Ranil Wickremesinghe on Friday and appointment of Mahinda Rajapaksa, the president, Maithripala Sirisena yesterday made appointments to a new Cabinet. 

    The appointments were tweeted from the president's office's tweet account: 

  • TNA leader meets Rajapaksa

    The Tamil National Alliance leader, R Sampanthan met with Mahinda Rajapaksa this morning, despite the ongoing political turmoil triggered by the latter's appointment as prime minister of Sri Lanka on Friday following the sacking of Ranil Wickremesinghe. 

    The TNA was a staunch supporter of the unity government and in 2015 pushed Tamil voters to vote for Sirisena in a bid to oust Rajapaksa, the then president. 

    Despite this seeming support however, Sampanthan lost no time to meet with the Rajapaksa, who is accused of overseeing the mass killing of Tamil people during the final stages of the armed conflict in 2009.

  • British MPs urge 'robust international response' to Sri Lanka's political turmoil

    British MPs have urged the UK foreign secretary, Jeremy Hunt to push for a "robust international response" to the unfolding political turmoil in Sri Lanka following the sacking of the prime minister, Ranil Wickremesinghe last week and appointment of the former president, Mahinda Rajapaksa. 

  • Full house for Mahinda as armed forces and police chiefs visit

    Sri Lanka’s top security force officials have met with Mahinda Rajapaksa, in an apparent show of support in the midst of Sri Lanka’s unfolding political crisis over the office of Prime Minister and the collapse of the unity government.

  • British government concerned over Sri Lanka's political crisis

    The UK government has expressed concern about Sri Lanka’s unfolding political crisis.

    The Foreign and Commonwealth Office’s Minister for Asia, Mark Field, said in a statement:

    “I am concerned by ongoing political developments in Sri Lanka and am following this fast-moving situation closely. Once again, I call upon all parties to uphold the constitution and due political and legal process.

  • US official meets speaker of parliament; urges Sri Lanka parliament to reconvene

    The US embassy in Sri Lanka's chargé d'affaires, Robert Hilton met with Sri Lanka’s speaker of parliament, Karu Jayasuria, and urged parliament to convene as soon as possible.

    "Met Speaker @KaruOnline to reconfirm U.S. support for democracy in #SriLanka.  @maithripalas and Speaker should convene Parliament, permit the people’s democratically elected representatives to fulfill their responsibilities to resolve the Constitutional impasse," Hilton tweeted. 

  • Paramilitary leader appointed minister for resettlement, rehabilitation and the North

    The leader of the EPDP, a pro-government Tamil paramilitary organisation accused of committing human rights abuses throughout and after the war, has been given a ministerial portfolio responsible for several key Tamil issues.

    The paramilitary leader Douglas Devananda was appointed ‘Minister of Resettlement, Rehabilitation, Northern Development, and Hindu Religious Affairs’ today in the cabinet of Mahinda Rajapaksa.

  • Ranil Wickremesinghe denies requesting deployment of UN peacekeeping forces to handle unrest in Sri Lanka

    Ranil Wickremesinhge’s media division denied reports that he had requested United Nations Peacekeeping Forces to be deployed in Sri Lanka on Monday.

    The rebuttal came after a letter addressed to international embassies requesting assistance in handling political arrest, that was signed by Wickremesinghe, had been circulated amongst media outlets.

  • Security withdrawn for Sri Lanka’s finance minister as crisis continues

    Sri Lanka’s finance minister claimed that his security detail had been withdrawn this morning, as the political turmoil on the island continued.

    Finance minister Mangala Samaraweera, a staunch support of Ranil Wickremesinghe, tweeted,

  • Sri Lanka's Petroleum Minister arrested for fatal shooting amidst threat of union strikes; released on bail

    Sri Lankan police on Monday arrested Sri Lanka’s Minister of Petroleum Arjuna Ranatunga after one of his bodyguards shot into crowds blocking him from entering his office.

    The police spokesperson Ruwan Gunasekara told Reuters, “Colombo Crime division arrested Ranatunga over the shooting incident and he will be produced to the court shortly.”

  • Rajapaksa pays homage to Buddhist monks at Kandy

    Mahinda Rajapaksa, Sri Lanka’s former president that oversaw the massacres of tens of thousands of Tamils, celebrated his appointment as Sri Lankan prime minister by visiting Buddhist monks in Kandy on Sunday.

  • Sri Lanka must meet commitments to international community – Canada

    Canada has called on Sri Lanka to ensure that it meets commitments it made to the international community amidst a political crisis on the island triggered by the appointment of Mahinda Rajapaksa as prime minister.

    The Canadian High Commissioner to Sri Lanka and Ambassador to the Maldives, David McKinnon, stated today that

  • US calls for Sri Lanka to ‘immediately reconvene parliament’

    The US State Department has called on Sri Lanka’s president “to immediately reconvene parliament” as the political crisis on the island continues following the appointment of Mahinda Rajapaksa as prime minister on Friday.

    “The United States continues to follow developments in Sri Lanka with concern,” said the State Department press release.

  • ‘Democracy in peril in Sri Lanka’ – The Hindu

    The Hindu has slammed the current Sri Lankan president’s appointment of Mahinda Rajapaksa as “blatant abuse of his executive powers” that has “put democracy in serious peril”.

    “Guided by narrow political interests, the President’s actions betray an utter disregard for the parliamentary process,” said the Hindu editorial on Monday.

    “All this has come at a time of economic fragility, with a plummeting rupee, soaring unemployment and rising living costs.”

  • Tamil Nadu parties condemn Rajapaksa as war criminal

    Tamil Nadu parties and key political figures have unanimously condemned the appointment of the former president, Mahinda Rajapaksa as Sri Lanka's prime minister due his role in war crimes and mass atrocities committed against Eelam Tamils in 2009. 

    Sri Lankan plunged into political crisis on Friday as the president, Maithripala Sirisena sacked the prime minister, Ranil Wickremesinghe and replaced him with Rajapaksa. 

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