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Sri Lankan political crisis could lead to bloodbath, says speaker

Rajapaksa assumed the duties in the prime minister's secretariat which was not used by the ousted prime minister Wickremesinghe

Mahinda Rajapaksa  | Photo: Wikimedia Commons
Mahinda Rajapaksa | Photo: Wikimedia Commons
Press Trust of India Colombo
Last Updated : Oct 30 2018 | 1:46 AM IST
Mahinda Rajapaksa on Monday assumed charge as Sri Lanka’s new Prime Minister even as defiant Ranil Wickremesinghe asserted that he still commands the majority in parliament amid warning by the Speaker that there could be “bloodbath” on the streets if the political crisis is not resolved immediately.
 
Rajapaksa assumed the duties in the prime minister's secretariat which was not used by the ousted prime minister Wickremesinghe.
 
President Maithripala Sirisena's new Cabinet was also sworn in and Rajapaksa was named the new minister of finance and economic affairs.

 
The new Cabinet was limited to just 12 ministers, one minister of state and one deputy minister. Among the new ministers, three belonged to the ousted Wickremesinghe's United National Party (UNP) who have defected.
 
The rest of the ministers are from Sirisena's previous Cabinet with Wickre-mesinghe who have been given same portfolios which they had handled under the unity government.

 
One new addition is from the northern district of Jaffna, Douglas Devananda, a Tamil who has been named the Minister of Resettlement, Rehabilitation, Northern Development and Hindu Religious Affairs.
 
Devananda while in opposition had backed Wickremesinghe during the no trust motion in April which Wickremesinghe won to retain his premiership with support coming from Tamil and Muslim minority parties.