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This Article is From Nov 29, 2018

Sri Lanka Parliament Passes Motion To Cut Prime Minister's Budget

The motion was aimed at preventing Rajapaksa from using government money for his day-to-day expenses as prime minister.

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Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa, who has refused to step down after twice losing confidence votes

Colombo:

Sri Lanka's parliament today agreed to cut the budget of the Prime Minister's office, a move designed to hinder disputed premier Mahinda Rajapaksa whose supporters boycotted the vote amid a weeks-long political crisis that shows no sign of ending.

Lawmakers opposed to Rajapaksa, who has lost two no confidence votes in parliament, regard his administration as illegitimate and say he should not be able to use government money for his day-to-day expenses.

"This means the prime minister will be dysfunctional. We will bring a similar motion tomorrow to cut down the expenditure of all other ministers," said Ravi Karunanayake, the former finance minister who proposed Thursday's motion which passed 123 to none in the 225-member parliament.

Thursday's vote comes more than a month after President Maithripala Sirisena triggered the crisis by ousting former Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe and replacing him with Rajapaksa, who was then in turn sacked by parliament.

Rajapaksa loyalists said Thursday's vote is illegal because there is a pending court case over whether an attempt by Sirisena to dissolve parliament on Novemebr 9 is constitutional. The court is set to rule on that issue next week.

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"This is illegal. We don't accept this as a legitimate motion," W.D.J. Seneviratne, a lawmaker in Rajapaksa's party, told Reuters before the vote.
"We have informed the speaker of our position and asked him not to allow this illegal motion to take up."

Rajapaksa, under whose rule Sri Lanka achieved its 2009 victory in a decades-long conflict against rebels from the Tamil minority, is seen as a hero by many among Sri Lanka's Buddhist majority. He has been accused by diplomats of human rights abuses during the war, which he denies.

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