Sri Lanka’s new Marxist-leaning president swore in a 22-member Cabinet yesterday after his party secured a two-thirds parliamentary majority in last week’s election.
The margin of victory would allow Sri Lankan President Anura Kumara Dissanayake to make sweeping reforms, including a campaign promise of a new Constitution, without needing support from other parties.
Sri Lanka is struggling to emerge from the worst economic crisis in its history, having declared bankruptcy after defaulting on its external debt in 2022.
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Dissanayake’s National People’s Power Party (NPP) won 159 of the 225 seats in Thursday’s vote.
He kept a pledge to have fewer than 25 Cabinet members, and a majority of the new ministers are first-time lawmakers. Dissanayake retained the post of minister for defense and minister for finance.
He also reappointed Harini Amarasuriya as prime minister. Amarasuriya, 54, was first appointed in September after Dissanayake won the presidential election and that made her the first woman to head the government in 24 years.
Vijitha Herath was reappointed as minister for foreign affairs, foreign employment, and tourism.
Dissanayake was elected president on Sept. 21 in a rejection of traditional political parties that have governed the island nation since its independence from British rule in 1948.
He has promised he would propose significant changes to the targets set in the IMF bailout deal signed by his predecessor, former Sri Lankan president Ranil Wickremesinghe, saying it placed too much burden on the people.
However, he has since said Sri Lanka would go along with the agreement, with debt restructuring with international creditors nearly complete.
Voters were also drawn by the NPP’s call for change in the political culture and an end to corruption.
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Tropical Storm Koto killed three people and left another missing as it approached Vietnam, authorities said yesterday, as strong winds and high seas buffeted vessels off the country’s flood-hit central coast. Heavy rains have lashed Vietnam’s middle belt in recent weeks, flooding historic sites and popular holiday destinations, and causing hundreds of millions of dollars in damage. Authorities ordered boats to shore and diverted dozens of flights as Koto whipped up huge waves and dangerous winds, state media reported. Two vessels sank in the rough seas, a fishing boat in Khanh Hoa province and a smaller raft in Lam Dong, according to the
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