Don’t want to be sandwiched between China and India: New Sri Lanka President

Sri Lanka’s new President Anura Kumara Dissanayake has outlined the broad contours of his government’s new foreign policy, stating that he doesn’t want to be caught between India and China.

In an interview with The Monocle, Dissanayake said, “We don’t want to be sandwiched, especially between China and India. Both countries are valued friends and, under an NPP government, we expect them to become close partners.”

“We also want to maintain relations with the EU, the Middle East and Africa,” Dissanayake said in his interview with The Monocle which was conducted on September 3.

Dissanayake, the leader of the Marxist Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna party’s broader front National People’s Power (NPP), defeated his closest rival Sajith Premadasa of Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) in Sri Lanka’s Parliamentary elections.

The election was the first to be held since mass protests unseated Gotabaya Rajapaksa in 2022 after the country suffered an economic crisis.

Dissanayake won the election, obtaining 5.74 million votes, with 105,264 preferences. Premadasa got 4.53 million votes with 167,867 preferences.

In his interview, Dissanayake also added that one of the priorities of his government would be to save the country from economic crisis.

“Both the main opposition and the ruling party follow the same neoliberal economic model. Today, sadly, we are a bankrupt nation. We have an external debt of €34billion, poverty has increased and the price of essential goods has skyrocketed. Our priority is to save the country from this economic crisis,” he said.

NPP urged to oppose 13A & federalism

Citing speculation regarding the lack of ethnic minority support for the newly elected National People’s Power (NPP) administration, led by the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna, the Lanka Janatha Pakshaya (LJP) expressed opposition to any possible federal solution, claiming that it lacks a mandate to address ethnic minority issues in this manner.

LJP General Secretary Madubhashana Ranahansa, speaking to the media, emphasised that the new President and the administration’s mandate predominantly reflects the Sinhala-Buddhist majority of the country. He argued that the NPP should respect the mandate that they received, which, according to him, does not include implementing the 13th Amendment to the Constitution or offering federal arrangements for the country’s ethnic minorities. Ranahansa further commented on the political landscape in the Northern and Eastern Provinces, stating that “the majority of the people in these areas have voted not for economic and political stability, but for the concept of a ‘separate state’.” He alleged that their voting patterns reflect aspirations for division, rather than unity under a single nation.

Elaborating on the Party’s stance, Ranahansa insisted that the NPP should prioritise its electoral promises to reform the economic and political systems of the country, instead of focusing on federalism. “The NPP should focus on delivering the change that they promised to the people, in terms of economic and political reforms, rather than entertaining demands for a federal State,” he added.

UNP, SJB Talks ongoing despite obstacles

Despite SJB leader Sajith Premadasa yesterday saying that his party will not enter into an alliance with the UNP to contest the General Election, Daily Mirror learns that the talks are still ongoing to make a final decision.

A decision to form a grand alliance for the general election with a new face as the Prime Ministerial candidate was announced earlier yesterday after former President Ranil Wickremesinghe’s decision that he will not contest any election in the future.

UNP Deputy Leader Ruwan Wijewardene who held a joint press conference together with Rajitha Senaratne and UNP Assistant Leader Akila Viraj Kariyawasam said Mr. Wickremesinghe has decided not to contest any election in keeping with the UNP tradition. “President J. R. Jayewardene did not contest after his retirement while late President D.B.Wijetunga also did the same. Mr. Wickremesinghe will follow this tradition,” they recalled.

Mr. Wickremesinghe will play an advisory role, the former MPs said.

UNP Chairman Vajira Abeywardene also confirmed the decision made by Mr. Wickremesinghe at a separate media conference. However he said Mr. Wickremesinghe will stand up for the nation if the need arises.
Wijewardene also said a decision has been made to form a broad alliance and to get the support of the SJB for it. “There are some SJB members who are in favour of joining a common grand alliance and we shall be talking to them,” he said in response to a question as to what would happen if SJB leadership opposes the move.

“We have the support of almost all parties which backed Mr. Wickremesinghe but what we intend doing is to obtain the support of others such as SJB,” Dr. Senaratne said.

It was reported on Monday that Mr. Wickremesinghe has appointed Talatha Atukorala and Mr. Wijewardene to carry out discussions with other parties to form a grand alliance.

The other decisions including the symbol of the new alliance will be decided later. In the meantime, Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) party seniors have decided not to team up with the UNP for the general elections and to field its leader Sajith Premadasa as its Prime Ministerial candidate for the same, a party spokesman said.

“SJB will be fielding our leader as SJB”s Prime Ministerial candidate and the party seniors have already made this decision,” he said.

Meanwhile, SJB National Organizer Tissa Attanayake told the media that there is no necessity for the SJB to ally with the UNP. “We will immediately reorganize ourselves from the grassroots level and will gear up for the general election,” he said.

Sri Lanka’s General Election on November 14

The Extraordinary Gazette notification issued by President Anura Kumara Dissanayake dissolving the Parliament of Sri Lanka effective from midnight today (24), has been published by the Department of Government Printing.

The proclamation dissolves Parliament with effect from midnight today and summons the new Parliament to meet on the November 21, 2024.

It has also fixed November 14, 2024 as the date for the election of the new Members of Parliament.

The Gazette notification further specifies the period beginning on October 04 and ending at 12 noon October 11, 2024 as the nomination period, during which nomination papers shall be received by the Returning Officers.

The President has issued the Gazette by virtue of the powers vested in him by Article 70 of the Constitution of the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka and in pursuance of the provisions of Section 10 of the Parliamentary Elections Act, No. 1 of 1981.

Dissanayake, leader of the People’s Liberation Front (JVP) and the National People’s Power (NPP) alliance, won a landslide victory over the weekend by beating 38 other candidates and garnering over 5.6 million or 42.3 per cent of the votes.

During the election campaign, Dissanayake vowed to dissolve Parliament if he wins and call snap elections. The present Parliament’s five-year term ends in August next year.

His party had just three lawmakers in Sri Lanka’s 225-member parliament.

Dissanayake was sworn into office on Monday while he appointed academic and first-time lawmaker Harini Amarasuriya as the new prime minister on Tuesday, making her the third woman to be appointed to the post.

On the same day, he appointed a three-member Cabinet which includes NPP’s Vijitha Herath, Amarasuriya and himself, which will serve as the caretaker government until the polls are held.

Meanwhile, President Dissanayake is expected to make a special statement while addressing the nation at 7.30 pm tomorrow (25 September), according to the Department of Government Information.

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Sri Lanka’s new President dissolves Parliament

President Anura Kumara Dissanayake has signed the Extraordinary Gazette notification dissolving the Parliament of Sri Lanka effective from midnight today (24).

The relevant Gazette notification has been sent to the Government Printer to be published, according to the President’s Media Division (PMD).

Meanwhile, the Government Printer confirmed that the Gazette notification pertaining to the dissolution of the Parliament has been received by the Department of Government Printing.

The President has issued the Gazette by virtue of the powers vested in him by Article 70 of the Constitution of the Democratic Socialist Republic of Sri Lanka and in pursuance of the provisions of Section 10 of the Parliamentary Elections Act, No. 1 of 1981.

The proclamation dissolves Parliament with effect from midnight today and summons the new Parliament to meet on the November 21, 2024.

It also fixes November 14, 2024 as the date for the election of the new Members of Parliament.

The Gazette notification further specifies the period beginning on October 04 and ending at 12 noon October 11, 2024 as the nomination period, during which nomination papers shall be received by the Returning Officers.

Dissanayake, leader of the People’s Liberation Front (JVP) and the National People’s Power (NPP) alliance, won a landslide victory over the weekend by beating 38 other candidates and garnering over 5.6 million or 42.3 per cent of the votes.

During the election campaign, Dissanayake vowed to dissolve Parliament if he wins and call snap elections. The present Parliament’s five-year term ends in August next year.

His party had just three lawmakers in Sri Lanka’s 225-member parliament.

Dissanayake was sworn into office on Monday while he appointed academic and first-time lawmaker Harini Amarasuriya as the new prime minister on Tuesday, making her the third woman to be appointed to the post.

On the same day, he appointed a three-member Cabinet which includes NPP’s Vijitha Herath, Amarasuriya and himself, which will serve as the caretaker government until the polls are held.

Meanwhile, President Dissanayake is expected to make a special statement while addressing the nation at 7.30 pm tomorrow (25 September), according to the Department of Government Information.

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Harini Amarasuriya sworn-in as Prime Minister

National People’s Power (NPP) MP Dr. Harini Amarasuriya was sworn in as the new Prime Minister of Sri Lanka, making her the 16th person to hold the position.

She was sworn in as the Minister of Justice, Education, Labour, Industries, Science & Technology, Health, and Investments.

Daily Mirror reported today that Harini Amarasuriya will be appointed as Prime Minister, with MPs Vijitha Herath and Lakshman Nipuna Arachchi set to be appointed ministers.

Parliament is to be dissolved this evening.

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Sri Lanka to seek ‘maximum support’ from China under new leader Dissanayake, analysts say

Sri Lanka’s left-leaning president-elect Anura Kumara Dissanayake has yet to declare a precise China policy, but was expected to seek “maximum support” from Beijing through foreign direct investment, technology and tourism, according to analysts.

On Monday, Chinese President Xi Jinping congratulated Dissanayake on his election victory on Saturday, hailing bilateral ties as “a good example of friendly coexistence and mutually beneficial cooperation between countries of different sizes” while committing to work with his new counterpart to boost relations.

China’s foreign ministry said it anticipated “new progress” in the strategic cooperative partnership between the countries, based on “sincere mutual assistance and everlasting friendship”.

Dissanayake emerged as the election winner after a second round count with 42.3 per cent of the vote, while his closest rival, opposition leader Sajith Premadasa, won 32.7 per cent.

His election campaign promised tough anti-corruption measures and policies to help the poor, as the debt-ridden South Asian state continues to grapple with a massive economic crisis that has fuelled nationwide unrest.

Dissanayake, 55, leads a socialist electoral coalition – the National People’s Power (NPP) – as well as its main party, the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP), a left-wing political group founded six decades ago to spearhead a communist revolution in the postcolonial South Asian state.

Dissanayake has appointed former air vice-marshal Sampath Thuyacontha, who was educated in China, as the new defence secretary.

Observers expected Dissanayake to be pragmatic in dealing with China during his five-year term, during which he is expected to help resuscitate an economy crushed by major policy errors, under-taxation and weak exports. Public debt has also surpassed US$83 billion and inflation soared to 70 per cent.
Dissanayake did not lay out a specific foreign policy position during his election campaign, but it is “highly probable” that he would prefer to work with China over its rival India, according to Priyanga Dunusinghe, an economics professor at the University of Colombo.

“President Dissanayake wants to get maximum support from China to develop Sri Lanka,” Dunusinghe said. “[He] may try to attract Chinese foreign direct investment and tourists to Sri Lanka and look for market opportunities for Sri Lankan exports.”

Since Sri Lanka is a member of China’s Belt and Road Initiative, Dissanayake may try to follow China’s development model, Dunusinghe said, adding that the president-elect might seek support from Beijing to develop digital infrastructure in the country.
Colombo joined the trillion-dollar infrastructure strategy in 2017, with both sides agreeing to cooperate to develop and invest in projects. The belt and road has played a significant role in port projects in Colombo and Hambantota, which Dissanayake has shown “greater interest” in, according to Dunusinghe.

“Dissanayake will be cautious given Indian concerns over closer ties between China and Sri Lanka, and amid recent political developments in the region,” Dunusinghe said, adding that Dissanayake’s predecessor, Ranil Wickremesinghe, applied a balanced approach towards both countries.
However, Colombo-based journalist and researcher Rathindra Kuruwita expected that Dissanayake would “treat China much more warmly” than the previous administrations of Wickremesinghe and Gotabaya Rajapaksa, who he said cosied up to India “at the expense of China”.

“Dissanayake and the NPP have pledged a non-aligned foreign policy, which had served Sri Lanka well in the 1960s and 1970s,” Kuruwita said, adding that Colombo needed Chinese investment to drive its exports and boost its manufacturing industry.

The JVP traces its origins to the pro-China faction of the Sri Lanka Communist Party in the 1960s and, historically, Beijing had tended to strengthen engagement with Sri Lanka when centre-left parties or politicians held power, Kuruwita said.

While increased engagement between Beijing and Colombo was expected, Dissanayake has also stressed maintaining strong ties with New Delhi, with increasing Indian investment a key part of his economic strategy, according to Kuruwita.

“Dissanayake has consistently denied any financial ties to China and reassured both Washington and New Delhi that Sri Lanka will not be used to undermine their security interests,” Kuruwita said.

Kalinga Seneviratne, a Sri Lanka-born researcher at Shinawatra University in Bangkok, said it was “too early to assess” Dissanayake’s diplomacy objectives.

“The main issues for his rural and working-class base was the cost of living, which has skyrocketed, and corruption, which people thought was not sorted out after the Aragalaya in 2022,” Seneviratne said, referring to eight months of protests that erupted as the economy collapsed.

But a widely circulated suggestion that Sri Lanka’s debt crisis was caused by China was not accurate, Seneviratne said.

“About 45 per cent of Sri Lanka’s debts were owed to [international sovereign bond holders] mainly based in the US,” Seneviratne said, adding that Wickremasinghe was pressured by the International Monetary Fund to increase the value-added tax while cutting government subsidies – moves that “hit people hard”.
Kuruwita said China had remained “largely disengaged” from Sri Lanka in terms of investments since the Covid-19 pandemic. The administrations of Wickremesinghe and Rajapaksa had both reneged on commitments under the influence of India, while Beijing shifted its focus to the Maldives, he said.

Source:https://www.scmp.com/

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Parliament to be dissolved tonight

An interim cabinet of four ministers to be appointed today

– Dr. Harini Amarasuriya to be appointed as Prime Minister

– Parliamentary Election to be held in December

– If NPP wins, new PM will be the one who gets highest votes and gathers most support in Parliament

– President to keep key portfolios such as Finance, Justice, Tourism, Investment Promotion

Parliament will be dissolved tonight and a Parliamentary Election will be held by December, the Daily Mirror exclusively learns.

Following the resignation of Dinesh Gunawardena as the Prime Minister yesterday, a senior source from the National People’s Power (NPP) said that President Anura Kumara Dissanayake will today appoint an interim cabinet of four ministers, including himself, where 15 portfolios will be divided within them.

According to a list exclusively obtained by the Daily Mirror, President Dissanayake will keep the Tourism, Defence, Finance, Justice, Industry and Investment Promotion portfolios while the Prime Minister will become the Minister of Foreign Affairs, Education, and Mass Media among others.

NPP MP Dr. Harini Amarasuriya will be sworn in as the Prime Minister while senior MP Vijitha Herath and newly sworn-in MP Lakshman Nipuna Arachchi will be appointed as ministers with several portfolios each.

Nipuna Arachchi took his oaths as an MP yesterday, filling the vacancy created by Anura Kumara Dissanayake in the Colombo electorate.

Sources from the NPP camp said that a Parliamentary election will be held after two months, that is in December, and after the President dissolves Parliament he will set the date as to when nominations will be called. After this date, the Elections Commission will give a period of 10 to 17 days to call for nominations.

After President Dissanayake dissolves Parliament, he will also announce the date of when the new Parliament will convene after the Parliamentary Election, which is likely to be in January.

President Dissanayake who was sworn in as the 9th Executive President yesterday morning following his victory in the Presidential Election met the tri-forces commanders for a meeting soon after and then his senior party members.

He then travelled to the Sri Dalada Maligawa in Kandy to seek blessings and then travelled to Tambuttegama to see his aged mother.

The Daily Mirror learns that after he dissolves Parliament tonight the NPP will plan to begin their campaign for the Parliamentary Election.

If the NPP wins the Parliamentary Election in December, the Daily Mirror learns that the MP who has won the highest number of votes from his or her electorate and who wins the highest support among the government parliamentarians will be appointed as the new Prime Minister.

Ready for General Election at Any Time, Says Sri Lanka’s Election Commission

The Election Commission has announced its readiness to conduct a general election at any given time.

Commissioner General of Elections, Saman Sri Ratnayake, stated that the estimated cost for a general election would be approximately Rs. 11 billion.

The Election Commission also noted that the voter registration list prepared for the presidential election will be used for the general election.

IMF to work with Sri Lanka’s new President on $3 Billion loan

The International Monetary Fund said it’s looking forward to working with Sri Lanka’s newly elected president Anura Kumara Dissanayake on the latest review of the country’s $3 billion bailout package.

“We will discuss the timing of the third review of the IMF-supported program with the new administration as soon as practicable,” the organization said in a statement after President Anura Kumara Dissanayake was sworn into office on Monday.

“We look forward to working together with President Dissanayake and his team towards building on the hard-won gains that have helped put Sri Lanka on a path to economic recovery since entering one of its worst economic crises in 2022,” the IMF added.

Dissanayake had campaigned on a promise to reopen negotiations with the IMF on the country’s big loan program. It came with deeply unpopular tax hikes and spending cuts that made the cost-of-living crisis a top issue for voters.

Reviewing the debt plan, though, risks delaying additional loans from the international organization. Sri Lanka needs to meet certain fiscal criteria before the next round of funding is released.

The country’s former president, Ranil Wickremesinghe, brokered the deal with the IMF and said upending it would be a costly mistake for the economy. Prior to the cash injection, the country faced an unprecedented economic crisis where spiraling inflation wiped out household savings and ignited protests.

Investors hope that Dissanayake will stick with the loan plan. Rizvie Salih, an executive committee member of the president’s coalition party, said Saturday that the country will remain with the program but seek modifications.

In its statement, the IMF said the recent agreement with bondholders “represents significant progress in Sri Lanka’s debt restructuring process,” adding that it’s still “subject to confirmation on comparability of treatment by Sri Lanka’s Official Creditors Committee.”