This Article is From Sep 21, 2014

Mahinda Rajapaksa Suffers Major Setback in Lanka Provincial Polls

Mahinda Rajapaksa Suffers Major Setback in Lanka Provincial Polls

File photo of Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa in Delhi (Press Trust of India Photo)

Colombo: In a major blow to Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa, his ruling coalition's popularity dwindled by an unprecedented 23 per cent in a key provincial election seen as precursor to a possible snap presidential poll.

The United People's Freedom Alliance (UPFA) of Rajapaksa retained the Uva or the south-eastern provincial council by securing 19 out of 34 seats that went to the polls yesterday, but his party's popularity dropped by an unprecedented 22.98 percentage points.

The vote percentage of the main opposition United National Party's (UNP) almost doubled, with the party winning 13 seats.

UNP General Secretary Tissa Attanayake said his party is ready to face a national election in January next year or even earlier.

"It is the ruling party which published that a Presidential election would be held in January next year and we urge them to hold the election in January or even before," Attanayake was quoted as saying by the Dailymirror.

He said the UNP was ready to face any national election be it a Presidential or a Parliamentary elections.

The JVP or People's Liberation Front, which won 2 seats, said the ruling UPFA has suffered the worst electoral setback.

"This is an indication of the downfall of the government.

People have shown their readiness to unseat the government," JVP leader Anura Kumara Dissanayake said.

The UPFA had 25 seats previously. The drop in votes and in the number of seats compared with the previous election in 2009 for the ruling party was significant.

For Rajapaksa, who took active part in campaigning in the election for his nephew and the incumbent chief minister, the results came as a setback.

He is widely expected to call for a snap presidential polls to seek a third successive term early next year.

A bitter pill for the Rajpaksa was the drop in vote at Moneragala, a predominantly rural majority Sinhala district.

He saw vote drop to 58 per cent from 81 per cent atMoneragala.

In the multi-ethnic Badulla district with a large population of Indian-origin people, the ruling coalition's vote dropped to 47 per cent from 67 per cent.

During previous local polls, Rajapaksa took advantage of his popularity among the Sinhalese majority for crushing Tamil rebels and ending the 37-year-long separatist war in 2009.

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