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Sri Lankan President set to clinch deal with Marxists
Colombo, May 25: Sri Lankan President Chandrika Kumaratunga`s party was making its first major step towards toppling the cohabitation government by forming an alliance with Marxists, party officials said today.
Colombo, May 25: Sri Lankan President Chandrika
Kumaratunga's party was making its first major step towards
toppling the cohabitation government by forming an alliance
with Marxists, party officials said today.
Kumaratunga's People's Alliance (PA), which is the main
opposition in the 225-member Legislature, will ratify a deal
with the JVP, or People's Liberation Front, on Tuesday, they
said.
"This is a first step towards increasing the numbers in
Parliament and then moving towards winning defections from the
government side to form a government without facing
elections," a top party source said.
He said a memorandum of understanding between the PA and
the JVP, drafted in Sinhalese, set out agreements on economic
policy, the ongoing peace process and the political aspects of
power sharing between them.
JVP spokesman Wimal Weerawansa, who is also a member of Parliament, declined to give details of the deal with the President, but said last week that the plan included measures to "revive and rebuild the nation."
"The talks have been very satisfactory and we have made progress. We will announce the details later," he said.
The opposition has been talking about an alliance between Kumaratunga's party and the JVP for six months after the two opened unity talks in a bid to topple the government of Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe.
Wickremesinghe, whose rival United National Party (UNP) won Parliamentary elections in December 2001, has been locked in a tense stand-off with Kumaratunga.
Bureau Report
JVP spokesman Wimal Weerawansa, who is also a member of Parliament, declined to give details of the deal with the President, but said last week that the plan included measures to "revive and rebuild the nation."
"The talks have been very satisfactory and we have made progress. We will announce the details later," he said.
The opposition has been talking about an alliance between Kumaratunga's party and the JVP for six months after the two opened unity talks in a bid to topple the government of Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe.
Wickremesinghe, whose rival United National Party (UNP) won Parliamentary elections in December 2001, has been locked in a tense stand-off with Kumaratunga.
Bureau Report