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Northern province CM will stay on despite differences: TNA

Sri Lanka's Northern Province Chief Minister C V Wigneswaran, against whom a no confidence motion has been moved, will not be removed despite differences between the moderate and hardline factions of the Tamil National Alliance, a senior leader claimed today.

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Sri Lanka's Northern Province Chief Minister C V Wigneswaran, against whom a no confidence motion has been moved, will not be removed despite differences between the moderate and hardline factions of the Tamil National Alliance, a senior leader claimed today.

A no confidence motion against Wigneswaran was handed over to Governor Reginald Cooray with the signatures of northern provincial council members on June 15.

Some 22 out of the 38 provincial council members had signed the motion after Wigneswaran's move to sack some ministers of his administration, triggering crisis in the northern council.

"He will not be removed. All four parties within the TNA are firmly backing the chief minister," M K Shivajilingam, a member of the northern provincial council and Wigneswaran's supporter said.

Two of the sacked ministers - Agriculture Minister P Aingaranesan and Education Minister T Kurukularaja - were subject to a corruption probe.

A committee appointed by the chief minister last year submitted its report last week. It found evidence on the charges made against the two ministers.

Wigneswaran, a former top judge, had asked the two ministers in the four-member cabinet to resign so that allegations against them can be investigated.

He has been at loggerheads with TNA's moderate faction since early 2015.

The TNA's moderate faction has been backing the government's reconciliation programme. However, Wigneswaran has expressed dissatisfaction with the government's delivery of reconciliation pledges.

Shivajilingam claimed that Governor Cooray had told him that Wigneswaran would not be removed.

This was following a counter resolution in support of the chief minister signed by 15 members.

However, Vannihamige Jayathilaka, one of the two Sinhala members in the council said Wigneswaran must be removed as over the last three years he had done nothing.

"He is not a northerner, sent from Colombo. He is connected to Sinhalese through family marriage," Jayathilaka said.

The TNA sources said despite sharp differences with Wigneswaran, the issue may be amicably settled without him being removed.

Wigneswaran, who became first ever Tamil elected chief minister in 2013, met religious leaders in the north yesterday to shore up support for himself.

A strike was staged in Jaffna yesterday in support of Wigneswaran.

Most shops were closed and public transport was at a standstill in support of the strike.

 

(This article has not been edited by DNA's editorial team and is auto-generated from an agency feed.)

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