Sri Lankan ministers denied that the president now enjoys dictatorial powers under a post-war constitutional revamp, but observers are worried about the chilling effect on democracy.
Parliament voted late on Wednesday in favor of the 18th amendment to the 1978 Constitution, scrapping a two-term limit on the presidency and handing sweeping new powers to Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapakse.
The law grants the head of state the ability to appoint officials to key posts in previously quasi-independent institutions such as the judiciary, police and election commission.
“The Constitution was used to consolidate power, without rebuilding governance structures,” said Paikiasothy Saravanamuttu, executive director of local think tank, the Center for Policy Alternatives.
“It’s a setback for democracy. Parliament is now a rubber-stamp institution, It’s a dark period for us,” he said.
The reforms were debated on Wednesday and passed with 161 in favor and 17 against in the 225-member parliament. The main opposition United National Party boycotted the debate, saying it did not want to be “contaminated.”
Government ministers said throughout the parliamentary session that the changes were needed to ensure stability in the country after the end of its 37-year ethnic conflict in May last year.
“The changes will bring economic prosperity to our motherland and strengthen the president’s hand to speed up vital economic development after the war ended,” Sri Lankan Energy Minister Champika Ranawaka said on Wednesday.
“We are not going in for a dictatorship,” Housing Minister Wimal Weerawansa said. “If the president wanted to be a dictator, he has enough powers without amending the current Constitution to do so.”
The head of rights group Transparency International in Sri Lanka, JC Weliamuna, said Rajapakse had systematically weakened civil society, the opposition and the media over the past three years.
“He has unlimited powers now. That’s dangerous,” Weliamuna said.
Rajapakse’s reputation has been built on military victory over the Tamil Tigers, which endeared him to his core supporters in the majority Sinhalese ethnic group.
He has also overseen a period of sharp post-war economic growth and promised to heal and unite the bitterly divided Sinhalese and Tamil ethnic groups which were on opposing sides of the conflict.
“He has the political power to do so, the question is whether he has the political will to do so,” said Harim Peiris, a lawyer and a former presidential spokesman.
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