Sri Lankan Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa with President Gotabhaya Rajapaksa. (File Photo | AP) 
World

Three Rajapaksas sworn into Sri Lanka's new Cabinet after vote

A landslide election victory last week gave the Rajapaksas’ political party nearly the two-third majority of seats required to make constitutional changes.

From our online archive

COLOMBO: Sri Lanka’s president swore into office a new Cabinet on Wednesday that includes two of his elder brothers and a nephew, after a landslide election victory last week.

The 26 Cabinet members include Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa, who also holds the finance, urban development and Buddhist affairs ministries. Eldest brother Chamal Rajapaksa is irrigation minister, and Namal Rajapaksa is the youth and sports minister in his maiden Cabinet portfolio.

President Gotabaya Rajapaksa also appointed his lawyer as justice minister. Ali Sabry appeared for Gotabaya when he faced court cases related to corruption as a top defense bureaucrat under Mahinda Rajapaksa’s presidency.

A landslide election victory last week gave the Rajapaksas’ political party nearly the two-third majority of seats required to make constitutional changes that could strengthen dynastic rule in the country. However, analysts say any changes that unsettle the balance of power between the Rajapaksas' respective offices could trigger sibling rivalry.

Five members of the Rajapaksa family are lawmakers— Mahinda Rajapaksa, his son Namal, the eldest brother Chamal and his son Sashindra, and a nephew, Nipuna Ranawaka. Mahinda Rajapaksa has been promoting Namal as his heir.

EC letter with BJP Kerala seal triggers row; poll panel calls it ‘clerical error’, says lapse rectified

West Asia war | Trump says US will postpone power plant strikes for five days after 'very good' talks; Iran denies claims

West Asia Crisis: Bloodbath in D-Street, investors lose Rs 13.5 lakh crores

West Asia conflict has created 'unprecedented' challenges for India: PM Modi in Parliament

Madurai court convicts 9 policemen in Sathankulam father-son custodial death case

SCROLL FOR NEXT