Sri Lanka Presidential Election Without Violence, Ranil Wickremesinghe Hails Polls As 'Turning Point'
Officials are yet to release the final voting percentage. By 2 pm, more than 60 per cent of the 17 million eligible people had voted.
Colombo: Polling concluded in Sri Lanka on Saturday with no violence or security breaches reported anywhere from all 22 electoral districts in the crucial presidential elections, the island nation's first since its worst economic meltdown in 2022.
The election officials said everyone who had entered the polling station by 4 pm was allowed to vote beyond the deadline.
Officials are yet to release the final voting percentage. By 2 pm, more than 60 per cent of the 17 million eligible people had voted, they said.
Observers said voting in the northern district of Jaffna was on a slow trickle by mid day. A Tamil minority hardline group had discouraged people from voting in the run up to the election.
The counting of postal votes commenced immediately after the voting closed at 4 pm, officials said.
Postal votes were cast by government employees mostly election officials, military and police. The postal voting was conducted four days earlier.
After postal votes are counted, “at 6 pm, we would like to start normal counting,” Colombo City Deputy Election Commissioner MKSKK Bandaramapa said earlier in the day.
The election saw the deployment of nearly 8,000 polls observers local and foreign. This included 116 international observers from the EU, Commonwealth, Asian network of elections and seven from the south Asian countries.
The People’s Action for Free and Fair Elections (PAFFREL), the leading local group, deployed 4,000 local observers.
The election will be a test for incumbent President Ranil Wickremesinghe who has claimed credit for putting the country on the road to economic recovery.
Analysts said this election is the most keenly contested of all presidential elections since 1982 with 38 candidates in the fray.
Some 17 million people were eligible to vote at over 13,400 polling stations. Over 2,00,000 officials were deployed to conduct the election. Buddhist temple halls, schools and community centres were converted into polling stations.
The three-cornered electoral battle saw Wickremesinghe facing stiff competition from Anura Kumara Dissanayake, 56, of the National People's Power (NPP), and Sajith Premadasa, 57, of the Samagi Jana Balawegaya (SJB) and the main Opposition leader.
Wickremesinghe, 75, is seeking re-election for a five-year term as an independent candidate, riding on the success of his efforts to pull the country out of the economic crisis, which many experts hailed as one of the quickest recoveries in the world.
Sri Lanka had plunged into an economic crisis when the island nation declared sovereign default in mid-April of 2022, its first since gaining independence from Britain in 1948. Almost civil-war-like conditions and months of public protests led to the fleeing of the then president Gotabaya Rajapaksa.
Wickremesinghe was appointed as president by Parliament a week after.
"It's a turning point for Sri Lanka to get away from conventional politics which destroyed the country and the conventional economy which destroyed the country... and (for) a new social system, and a political system," Wickremesinghe said after casting his vote in Colombo.
Under Wickremesinghe, the rupee has stabilised, inflation has slowed to near zero from over 70 per cent during the peak of the economic crisis, economic growth has turned to positive from contraction, and government revenue has jumped sharply after new taxes and an increase in value added tax (VAT).
Though Wickremesinghe's recovery plan to tie rigid reforms linked to the International Monetary Fund (IMF) bailout was hardly popular, it helped Sri Lanka recover from successive quarters of negative growth. Dissanayake and Premadasa want to tinker with the IMF programme to give more economic relief to the public.
This time, the minority Tamil issue was not on the agenda of any of the three main contenders, instead, the nation's battered economy and its recovery had taken centre stage with all three front runners vowing to stick with the IMF bail-out reforms.
Sri Lanka's crisis proved to be an opportunity for Dissanayake, who had seen a surge of support due to his pledge to change the island's "corrupt" political culture.
After the counting, if no candidate receives more than 50 per cent of the votes, a second preferential vote count will be conducted.
Voters in Sri Lanka elect a single winner by ranking up to three candidates in order of preference. If a candidate receives an absolute majority, they will be declared the winner. If not, a second round of counting will commence, with second and third-choice votes then taken into account.
No election in Sri Lanka has ever progressed to the second round of counting, as single candidates have always emerged as clear winners based on first-preference votes.
(This report has been published as part of the auto-generated syndicate wire feed. Apart from the headline, no editing has been done in the copy by ABP Live.)