The Lanka Academic

 
FEBRUARY 10, 2007 EST, USA
 
QUAERE VERUM
 
VOL. 7, NO. 310

TLA FORUM

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IN MEMORIAM

We have lost a great mathe- matician, engineer, scientist, an old timer of SLNet/LAcNet and a former LAcNet director. Pubudu Dayawansa (Daya) was instrumental in carrying out many LAcNet projects. He was responsible in setting up "Colombo Calling" a website that was designed to carry weekly articles from Sri Lankan Academic community and Human Rights activists. [ More...]
TLA FEATURE CORNER
Headline Summary
F R E E      C L A S S I F I E D S
T  O  P      H  E  A  D  L  I  N  E
Why Mahinda sacked his top ministers
hidustan times, Feb 10, 2007. By sacking top line ministers Mangala Samaraweera, Anura Bandaranaike and Sripathi Sooriyarachchi on Friday, Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa has sent out a clear warning that he will not tolerate the formation of any group in the ruling Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP) which owes allegiance to his main rival, former President Chandrika Kumaratunga.

Samaraweera, Bandaranaike and Sooriyarachchi are closely identified with Kumaratunga, who Rajapaksa sees as a threat to the emerging order in the SLFP, though she no longer holds any political office and does not even reside in Sri Lanka. More... Discuss this story
Published: Sat Feb 10 10:19:25 EST 2007


Ouster may trigger political crisis in Sri Lanka
hindu.com, Feb 10, 2007. COLOMBO: Friday's ouster of three senior Sri Lankan Cabinet Ministers by President Mahinda Rajapaksa is bound to lead to a political crisis, say political and diplomatic observers.

The sacked Ministers — Mangala Samaraweera, Anura Bandaranaike and Sripathi Suriyarachchi — were not immediately available for comment.

With a possible revolt by influential sections from within his Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SLFP), Mr. Rajapaksa will find the going tough as an enraged opposition, United National Party (UNP) has already declared that it is "impossible" to cooperate with the Government.

The ultra-nationalist Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna, an electoral partner of Mr. Rajapaksa, is also cross with him on a number of issues. The political situation could pave way for a general election sooner rather than later. More... Discuss this story
Published: Sat Feb 10 00:28:14 EST 2007 Back to the top


Sri Lankan president dismisses 3 ministers
Associated Press, Fri February 9, 2007 12:59 EST . RUWAN WEERAKOON - Associated Press Writer - COLOMBO, Sri Lanka - (AP) Sri Lanka - 's President Mahinda Rajapakse said Friday he has dismissed three key ministers from their portfolios, but did not immediately give a reason for his move. The three ministers sacked on Friday were stalwarts of Rajapakse's Sri Lanka - Freedom Party, which is the main component of the coalition government.

They had been opposed to allowing members of the main United National Party to join the government and criticized the expansion of the Cabinet.

Rajapakse's move came a day after Bandaranaike, who is the brother of former president Chandrika Kumaratunga, complained to Parliament that he has been receiving anonymous, threatening calls from people linked to Rajapakse.

News reports quoted Rajapakse's office as saying it was investigating the allegations.

Samaraweera, who had held the foreign affairs and ports and aviation portfolios before the reshuffle, was removed as foreign minister in the reshuffle. Bandaranaike, who had been tourism minister, was demoted to the national heritage ministry in the reshuffle. Their original portfolios were given to defectors from the main opposition United National Party.

Port Development minister Sooriyaarachi was not a member of the Cabinet, and had not been affected by the reshuffle.

A total of 19 members of the UNP crossed over to the government's side, while six members from the Sri Lanka - Muslim Congress also joined the administration.

Days later, the National Heritage Party, a hardline Buddhist monks' party, also joined Rajapakse's government. The party has eight seats in Parliament.

The UNP has said Rajapakse's move to lure its members to defect has effectively ended a previous agreement between them to cooperate in solving the island's two-decade-long separatist war.

A negotiated power-sharing settlement with ethnic minority Tamils, who are mostly Hindus, could be further hampered by the inclusion of the monks' party in government, as they have stridently opposed any talks with Tamil separatist rebels.

The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam rebels have been fighting since 1983 to create a separate homeland for the country's 3.1 million minority Tamils, saying that after decades of discrimination, Tamils can prosper only away from the domination of the majority Sinhalese.

About 68,000 people have been killed in the fighting, including some 3,600 fighters and civilians who died last year when the conflict escalated despite a 2002 Norway-brokered cease-fire. Discuss this story
Published: Fri Feb 9 14:25:40 EST 2007 Back to the top

Related News Stories
·
Sri Lanka President fires three ministers over dissent  - alertnet.org
·
Rajapaksa sacks three dissident ministers  - HT
·
Local TV: 3 key Sri Lankan ministers have been removed from Cabinet  - Associated Press

Peace pact with LTTE was a mistake: President Rajapakse
zeenews.com, February 09, 2007 . New Delhi, Feb 09: Conceding that the peace pact with the Tamil Tigers was a mistake, Sri Lanka said it expects India to be "more sensitive" and lend "more support" to solve the conflict in the island nation... Back to the top

Sri Lanka's president seems as mindless as any bomber
Guardian, Feb 9, 2007 . The roadblock was unexpected. Driving to Colombo along Sri Lanka's south-west coast, we were forced on to a sidestreet by police in Hikkaduwa, one of the island's main tourist centres... Back to the top

Sri Lanka and China to stand by each other in 2007
rxpgnews.com, Feb 9, 2007 . By Xinhua, [RxPG] Colombo, Feb 9 - Sri Lankan Prime Minister Ratnasiri Wickramanayaka has said that Sri Lanka is China's friend and the two countries 'will always stand by each other... Back to the top

LTTE urged to lay down arms
BBC Sinhala, 09 Feb 2007 - 11:30 EDT. Sri Lanka's president, Mahinda Rajapakse, says the door is still open to negotiations with the Tamil Tiger rebels... Back to the top

Sri Lanka Asks India, China to Pay $100m Each for Oil Deal
energybangla.com, 09 Feb 2007 03:45 EDT. Sri Lanka has asked the governments of India and China to place deposits of $100 million each for securing blocks to explore oil off the island's northwestern shores... Back to the top

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