Amid the rising political crisis in Sri Lanka, former strongman Mahinda Rajapaksa on Monday assumed charge as the new Prime Minister of the country. The latest development in the country comes after the surprise sacking of his predecessor Ranil Wickremesinghe by President Maithripala Sirisena which plunged the island nation into an unprecedented political crisis.
Rajapaksa assumed the duties in the prime minister's secretariat which was not used by the ousted prime minister Wickremesinghe, officials from his Sri Lanka People's Party (SLPP) said.
Sirisena on Friday night sacked Wickremesinghe and appointed Rajapaksa as the new prime minister in a surprise move that is being debated as a constitutional coup.
Sirisena also suspended parliament till November 16 after Wickremesinghe sought an emergency session to prove his majority.
Earlier on Sunday, Sri Lankan Parliament's Speaker Karu Jayasuriya recognised Wickremesinghe as the prime minister.
At least a few Cabinet members will to be sworn in later, the party officials said.
"There will be ministers of finance, law and order, foreign and home affairs who would be sworn in," said a spokesman of the SLPP.
Wickremesinghe continues to remain in his Temple Trees office cum residence of the prime minister.
President Sirisena has summoned the Colombo-based diplomats for a briefing at 5 pm Monday.
He is facing international pressure over his controversial decision to suspend parliament. UN chief Antonio Guterres and and the US State Department have called on the country's government to respect democratic values and constitutional provisions and process.
Speaker Jayasuriya, who had written to Sirisena over the issue of not consulting him in suspending parliament, visited the influential Buddhist chief monks in the central town of Kandy to apprise them on the ongoing political crisis.
Jayasuriya told them that convening parliament was the only way to resolve the crisis.
Wickremesinghe's United National Party (UNP) said that at least 128 MPs in the 225-member assembly have signed to call for an immediate reconvening of parliament.
Rajapaksa was defeated in the 2015 presidential election by Sirisea who had the backing of Wickremesinghe's UNP. After a unity government, the political relationship soured between the two, leading to Wickremesinghe's sacking by Sirisena.
The second largest opposition group in parliament Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) said they had asked the Speaker to convene parliament in order to end the political impasse.
Rajapaksa in his statement last night called for a snap parliamentary election to end the impasse.
The UNP said they rejected all personal allegations made by President Sirisena against Wickremesinghe.
The city of Colombo was put under tight security with president Sirisena's official residence area being sealed off for normal traffic.
Meanwhile, the political crises in Sri Lanka took an ugly turn on Sunday when when bodyguards of Petroleum Minister Arjuna Ranatunga, a loyalist of Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, fired live rounds at the supporters of the new premier Mahinda Rajapaksa, leaving one person dead.
One person succumbed to his injuries and two others were hospitalised in the shooting incident and a security personnel was arrested at the Ceylon Petroleum Corporation (CPC) premises in Dematagoda following a tense situation on Sunday, police said.
The incident took place when the cricketer-turned-politician visited the CPC office, with several Ceylon Petroleum Corporation workers objecting to his presence at the office.
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