Sri Lanka to hold polls seen as key test of president
Sirisena's allies say the president has deliberately stalled local council polls to buy time
COLOMBO:
Sri Lanka Monday began preparing for long-delayed local elections seen as a key popularity test of embattled President Maithripala Sirisena, whose coalition government is embroiled in bitter infighting.
Sirisena's allies say the president has deliberately stalled local council polls to buy time as he tries to heal rifts within his own party, an accusation he denies.
The local vote, likely to be in early February, is seen as a crucial mid-term test for Sirisena, who has struggled to hold the raucous ruling alliance together since his election in 2015.
Sri Lanka court jails top former senior officials for graft
Rajith Keerthi Tennakoon from the non-profit Campaign for Free and Fair Elections said voters were no longer considering this a small local election.
"People felt they were being deprived of their vote for a long time," Tennakoon told AFP. "This could be a test of the president's popularity."
Sirisena has said the election was delayed by nearly two years because authorities had to redraw complex electoral boundaries.
The clash over the local polls is the latest in a series of disputes within the ruling coalition, formed after Sirisena split his own Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) and secured support from the rival United National Party.
Sri Lanka rejects UN call for foreign judges in war probe: govt
The allies have since clashed over economic policy and on stalled investigations into corruption under the regime of former president Mahinda Rajapakse, who is also from the SLFP.
Parliament last week announced an investigation into the alleged tapping of lawmakers' private phones by a Sirisena-appointed commission, deepening the acrimony within the coalition.
The president's own party is split between him and predecessor Rajapakse, who ruled Sri Lanka for a decade and presided over the end of the decades-long civil war.
Rajapakse remains a threat to Sirisena's leadership of the SLFP, wielding considerable influence in Sri Lankan politics.
Sri Lanka Monday began preparing for long-delayed local elections seen as a key popularity test of embattled President Maithripala Sirisena, whose coalition government is embroiled in bitter infighting.
Sirisena's allies say the president has deliberately stalled local council polls to buy time as he tries to heal rifts within his own party, an accusation he denies.
The local vote, likely to be in early February, is seen as a crucial mid-term test for Sirisena, who has struggled to hold the raucous ruling alliance together since his election in 2015.
Sri Lanka court jails top former senior officials for graft
Rajith Keerthi Tennakoon from the non-profit Campaign for Free and Fair Elections said voters were no longer considering this a small local election.
"People felt they were being deprived of their vote for a long time," Tennakoon told AFP. "This could be a test of the president's popularity."
Sirisena has said the election was delayed by nearly two years because authorities had to redraw complex electoral boundaries.
The clash over the local polls is the latest in a series of disputes within the ruling coalition, formed after Sirisena split his own Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) and secured support from the rival United National Party.
Sri Lanka rejects UN call for foreign judges in war probe: govt
The allies have since clashed over economic policy and on stalled investigations into corruption under the regime of former president Mahinda Rajapakse, who is also from the SLFP.
Parliament last week announced an investigation into the alleged tapping of lawmakers' private phones by a Sirisena-appointed commission, deepening the acrimony within the coalition.
The president's own party is split between him and predecessor Rajapakse, who ruled Sri Lanka for a decade and presided over the end of the decades-long civil war.
Rajapakse remains a threat to Sirisena's leadership of the SLFP, wielding considerable influence in Sri Lankan politics.