Colombo:
In one of the his first significant moves as Sri Lanka’s newly-elected President, leftist leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake today dissolved the country’s Parliament and called for snap polls within one month. The aim behind the move is for the new leader to follow-up on his electoral promise of bringing change in Sri Lanka’s decades-old rule by political families.
The dissolution of Sri Lanka’s Parliament will be effective midnight tonight and the fresh elections will be held on November 14, a special gazette notification said. The last time that Sri Lanka’s Parliament was convened was back in August 2020. The term, though in place till August 2025, comes to an end tonight – 11 months ahead of schedule.
Sri Lanka, which voted for Anura Kumara Dissanayake, an opposition leader, is on the slow recovery from its worst-ever economic crisis, which hit the south Asian nation in 2020. Millions of Sri Lankans had taken to the streets in protest against the then President Gotabaya Rajapaksa. Thousands had stormed the Presidential palace in Colombo as Mr Rajapaksa fled the nation at the time.
Then Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, took the reins and brought stability to the Lankan economy as well as peace to the streets. Last week, Sri Lanka held elections for the first time since the economic crisis, and millions voted for change.
Mr Dissanayake has been a strong campaigner against corruption and had made an electoral promise to fight against corruption, put an end to dynastic politics, bolster the economy, bring down inflation, and bring in major reforms.
“I pledge to demonstrate dedication to protecting and upholding democracy,” Mr Dissanayake, 55, said in his inaugural remarks at the President’s Office in Colombo, saying he was taking office “at a challenging time”.
“Our politics needs to be cleaner, and the people have called for a different political culture,” he said in his first speech as President, adding that “I am ready to commit to that change.”
Mr Dissanayake ran as the candidate for the National People’s Power or NPP alliance, which also includes his Janatha Vimukhti Peremuna or JVP party, that traditionally championed Marxist economic policies centred on protectionism and state intervention.