New Lanka govt to go on with emergency rule

Rajapakse to keep finance, defence portfolios
By Afp, reuters, Colombo
Sri Lanka's new government will maintain a state of emergency and the national parliament will be asked to ratify the tough laws, officials said.

President Mahinda Rajapakse, who was sworn in Saturday after his victory at Thursday's election, was due to prorogue parliament later Monday and summon the assembly on Friday, officials said.

"After parliament holds its ceremonial sitting with an address by the new president, the assembly will meet again that afternoon to ratify the state of emergency," the official said.

The current emergency laws were declared by former president Chandrika Kumaratunga on August 13, a day after foreign minister Lakshman Kadirgamar was assassinated by suspected Tamil Tiger rebels.

Emergency laws give sweeping powers to police and security forces to arrest and detain suspects for lengthy periods without warrants.

The parliament was on Tuesday due to debate the national budget unveiled by former finance minister Sarath Amunugama earlier this month, but Rajapakse said he would unveil a new budget incorporating his election promises.

Meanwhile, Sri Lanka's new president, Mahinda Rajapakse, will keep the finance and defence portfolios for himself when he unveils his cabinet later on Tuesday, his media secretary told Reuters.

Rajapakse, the island's former prime minister, has previously held the labour, fisheries and highways portfolios in cabinet, but has never held the post of Finance Minister.

"It is only two posts (he is keeping). One is defence, the other one is finance," said media secretary Chandrapala Liyanage. The swearing in ceremony of the cabinet ministers will be this evening."