Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena (File | AFP) 
World

Sri Lankan president Maithripala Sirisena to probe alleged fraud by Ranil Wickremesinghe's regime

Sirisena further said he will not re-appoint Wickremesinghe as the premier if the current government led by Mahinda Rajapakse fails to secure a majority in the parliament.

From our online archive

COLOMBO: Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena said that he will appoint a commission to probe into the alleged fraud and malpractices which took place under the previous government led by ousted Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe.

Speaking to the Foreign Correspondents Association on Sunday, Sirisena said he had not gone against the constitution of the country by removing Wickremesinghe and appointing former President Mahinda Rajapakse to the post, and alleged that the former government had been involved in fraud and corruption.

"The new commission will investigate corruption and fraud committed from the time the new government was appointed in 2015 to date.

I am certain there will be frauds of serious nature that will surface," the president said.

Sirisena further said he will not re-appoint Wickremesinghe as the premier if the current government led by Mahinda Rajapakse fails to secure a majority in the parliament.

"I will appoint someone who I can work with and whose economic policies will benefit this country," Sirisena said.

Sri Lanka has been embroiled in a severe political crisis following Wickremesinghe's sacking on Oct 26, with Wickremesinghe and his party, the United National Party alleging that the president had violated the constitution by removing him.

The UNP said that the present caretaker government appointed by Sirisena could not continue as they had been defeated in a no-confidence motion in Parliament, which Sirisena rejected, saying it had not been conducted in a constitutional manner by Speaker Karu Jayasuriya.

President Sirisena has requested the parliament to conduct the vote again, following all parliamentary traditions.

Some 122 Sri Lankan legislators last week also filed a legal challenge in court against the new government's continuation in office.

Sirisena has maintained that the present crisis is not serious and will not affect the daily lives of Sri Lankans and assured the political unrest will be settled soon.

Trump upbeat as US, Iran hold 'very good' indirect talks in Qatar

Nepal ready for diplomatic dialogue with India to resolve border dispute, says Foreign Minister Khanal

From India's furnace to Europe's inferno: The science behind extreme heat

Why the US Supreme Court's birthright citizenship ruling is a major relief for Indians

India urges Pakistan to free 188 prisoners; seeks consular access to 13 Indians

SCROLL FOR NEXT