Sri Lanka reinstates ousted prime minister, ending power struggle

Supreme Court confirmed that Rajapakse could not exercise powers of prime minister until he proved his legitimacy

Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena (R) handing over documents to Ranil Wickremesinghe (L) as he is reappointed as prime minister in Colombo. PHOTO: AFP

COLOMBO:
Sri Lanka's president on Sunday reappointed as prime minister the same man he sacked from the job nearly two months ago, ending a messy power struggle that had paralysed the island nation.

Ranil Wickremesinghe, whose shock dismissal in late October threw Sri Lanka into constitutional crisis, was sworn in at a closed-door ceremony in the president's office in Colombo.

The 69-year-old had refused to step aside since being dumped and replaced by controversial strongman Mahinda Rajapakse — leaving the country with two rival leaders and no functioning government.

The ousted premier had long asserted his dismissal was illegal, a view supported by Sri Lanka's parliament which six times voted against Rajapakse's claim to rule during tumultuous sessions that erupted into brawls.

President Maithripala Sirisena had refused to bow to pressure as the country drifted, declaring he would never reappoint Wickremesinghe and deriding his once-ally in public speeches as their alliance imploded.

The acrimony between the two was underscored Sunday when Sirisena barred journalists from attending the swearing-in ceremony — leaving it to Wickremesinghe's legislators to announce the appointment.

Sri Lanka's newly appointed PM Rajapaksa resigns - party lawmaker, son

"We thank the citizens of the country who fought the illegal seizure of power and ensured that democracy was restored," his United National Party of Sri Lanka posted on Twitter.
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