A day after his stunning victory deposing the formidable Mahinda Rajapaksa in the presidential election, the new President is planning to include ministers from a cross-section of parties.
He also began a purge of the bureaucracy of the Rajapaksa regime, appointing Rajitha Senaratne as the government spokesman. P B Abeykoon, a senior civil servant, has replaced Lalith Weeratunga as the Presidential Secretary or the head of the civil service.
Sirisena, who had promised a 100-day programme to carry out urgent political and economic reforms, has ordered the immediate lifting of censorship on dissident websites, an end to phone tapping, surveillance of journalists and politicians, and the establishment of a right to information law.
Sri Lankan journalists and other dissidents, who had fled the country, were invited back on the promise that criticism was welcome.
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Sirisena himself made no public comments today and he is expected to make an address in the hill town of Kandy tomorrow.
Senaratne said Prime Minister Narendra Modi and British Premier David Cameron were among the first to congratulate Sirisena, whose first overseas visit will be to India next month.