Wickremesinghe wins parliamentary vote to be Sri Lanka’s new president

1 / 2
Demonstrators watch a public screen as voting begins to elect the new Sri Lankan president at the parliament, amid the country’s economic crisis, in Colombo. (Reuters)
2 / 2
Hundreds of police, paramilitary and military troops were deployed around the Sri Lankan parliament building as a precaution against possible violence. (Reuters)
Short Url
Updated 20 July 2022
Follow

Wickremesinghe wins parliamentary vote to be Sri Lanka’s new president

  • The 225-member parliament gave 134 votes to Wickremesinghe and 82 to Dullas Alahapperuma
  • A third candidate, Anura Kumara Dissanayaka, got just three votes

COLOMBO: Sri Lankan lawmakers voted acting President Ranil Wickremesinghe as the new president on Wednesday, hoping he would pull the country out of a crippling economic and political crisis.

“Ranil Wickremesinghe has been elected as the eighth executive president under the constitution,” the secretary general of parliament said after counting finished.

The win for Wickremesinghe, opposed by many ordinary Sri Lankans, could lead to more demonstrations by people furious with the ruling elite after months of severe shortages of fuel, food and medicines, several protesters have said.

The other main candidate, ruling party lawmaker Dullas Alahapperuma, was more acceptable to the protesters and the opposition but did not have any top-level governance experience in a country with barely any dollars for imports and desperately in need of an IMF bailout.

The 225-member parliament gave 134 votes to Wickremesinghe and 82 to Alahapperuma. A third candidate, Anura Kumara Dissanayaka, got just three votes.


South Africa to withdraw its troops from UN peacekeeping mission in Congo

Updated 58 min 52 sec ago
Follow

South Africa to withdraw its troops from UN peacekeeping mission in Congo

  • South Africa to withdraw its troops from UN peacekeeping mission in Congo

JOHANNESBURG: South Africa will withdraw its troops from the United Nations peacekeeping mission in the ​Democratic Republic of Congo, President Cyril Ramaphosa’s office said in a statement late on Saturday.
Ramaphosa has told UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres about the decision, which was influenced by the need ‌to “realign” the ‌resources of South ‌Africa’s ⁠armed ​forces, ‌the statement said.
South Africa has supported UN peacekeeping efforts in Congo for 27 years and has more than 700 soldiers deployed there.
The UN mission had a total of nearly ⁠11,000 troops and police deployed when its ‌mandate was extended in ‍December.
The UN ‍mission’s mandate is to counter ‍the many rebel groups active in Congo’s restive east, where conflict has raged for decades and where there has ​been a recent escalation in fighting.
“South Africa will work jointly ⁠with the UN to finalize the timelines and other modalities of the withdrawal, which will be completed before the end of 2026,” the statement added.
South Africa will continue to maintain close bilateral ties with Congo’s government and support other multilateral efforts to bring lasting ‌peace to Congo, Ramaphosa’s office said.