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

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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)
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Hundreds of police, paramilitary and military troops were deployed around the Sri Lankan parliament building as a precaution against possible violence. (Reuters)
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Updated 20 July 2022
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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.


France’s Macron accepts resignation of Louvre museum chief after jewel theft

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France’s Macron accepts resignation of Louvre museum chief after jewel theft

  • Des Cars has faced intense criticism since ⁠burglars made off in October with jewels worth an estimated $102m
  • Strikes over pay and conditions since December have also led to regular closures

PARIS: French President Emmanuel Macron accepted the resignation on Tuesday of the head of Paris’ Louvre museum, which has been grappling with the fallout from a high-profile jewel heist and rolling strikes.
Laurence des Cars tendered her resignation, which Macron accepted, “praising an act of responsibility at a time when ⁠the world’s largest museum ⁠needs calm and a strong new impetus to successfully carry out major projects involving security and modernization,” his office said.
Des Cars has faced intense criticism since ⁠burglars made off in October with jewels worth an estimated $102 million that are still missing, exposing glaring security gaps at the world’s most-visited museum.
Strikes over pay and conditions since December have also led to regular closures and added to a list of woes that included two water leaks ⁠as ⁠well as a massive ticket fraud investigation.
Critics including the state auditors’ office have questioned the museum’s low spending on security and infrastructure maintenance while it made lavish purchases of new artwork, only a quarter of which is open to the public, and spent heavily on post-pandemic relaunch projects.