Sri Lanka parliament seeks reinstatement of sacked PM

Sri Lankan member of parliament Douglas Devananda (R) and Dinesh Gunawardena (2R) look on outside the Supreme Court in Colombo on 12 December 2018. Sri Lanka`s ousted prime minister promised on 10 December, to bring tens of thousands of supporters to the capital next week for a massive demonstration unless president Maithripala Sirisena reinstated him imminently. Photo: AFP
Sri Lankan member of parliament Douglas Devananda (R) and Dinesh Gunawardena (2R) look on outside the Supreme Court in Colombo on 12 December 2018. Sri Lanka`s ousted prime minister promised on 10 December, to bring tens of thousands of supporters to the capital next week for a massive demonstration unless president Maithripala Sirisena reinstated him imminently. Photo: AFP

Sri Lanka's legislature voted overwhelmingly Wednesday to demand the reinstatement of prime minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, as a bitter power struggle headed for a government shut down within weeks.

Members of Wickremesinghe's party and their allies voted 117-0 asking president Maithripala Sirisena to restore the status quo prior to 26 October when he dismissed his former ally.

"This resolution expressing confidence in me is a vote to defeat the coup of 26 October," Wickremesinghe told parliament referring to his controversial sacking by Sirisena six weeks ago.

Sri Lanka has been trapped in a bitter power feud since the president replaced Wickremesinghe with Mahinda Rajapakse, a controversial former strongman leader who has failed to secure parliamentary support.

Parliament has twice voted against Rajapakse but he has refused to step down. Instead, Rajapakse and his allies are boycotting parliament since they do not have a majority in the 225-member assembly.

It was not immediately clear if Wednesday's resolution would be accepted by Sirisena who has vowed he will not give the job back to Wickremesinghe.

Courts have prevented Rajapakse and his disputed cabinet exercising the powers they claim until they can prove their legitimacy. A hearing by the Court of Appeal on Wednesday was put off till 16 January.

Former finance minister Ravi Karunanayake said the entire public sector will come to a complete stand still from 1 January in the absence of a budget for the New Year.

"Unless this parliament approves a budget for 2019, the government will not be able to spend even one cent from 1 January," Karunanayake told parliament.

Officials have expressed similar fears and urged Sirisena to resolve the crisis at the earliest. Sri Lanka's credit ratings have already been cut.

Parliament, dominated by Wickremesinghe and his allies, has also blocked the office of prime minister spending any funds.

The parliament chamber has witnessed violence in recent weeks as the power struggle dragged on, with Rajapakse loyalists throwing chilli powder at rivals and smashing furniture.