Jump to content

Wijetunga cabinet

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

This is an old revision of this page, as edited by Obi2canibe (talk | contribs) at 16:13, 30 August 2020 (Undid revision 974673417 by 43.250.242.208 (talk) rv). The present address (URL) is a permanent link to this revision, which may differ significantly from the current revision.

Wijetunga cabinet

12th Cabinet of Sri Lanka
Date formed1 May 1993
Date dissolved12 November 1994
People and organisations
Head of stateD. B. Wijetunga
Head of governmentD. B. Wijetunga
Deputy head of governmentRanil Wickremesinghe (1993–94)
Chandrika Kumaratunga (1994)
Member party
  •   United National Party (1993–94)
  •   People's Alliance (1994)
Status in legislatureMajority
125 / 225 (56%)
(1993-94)
Majority coalition
121 / 225 (54%)
(1994)
Opposition party
Opposition leaderSirimavo Bandaranaike (1993–94)
Gamini Dissanayake (1994)
Ranil Wickremesinghe (1994)
History
Election1994 parliamentary
Outgoing election1994 presidential
Legislature terms9th, 10th
PredecessorPremadasa cabinet
SuccessorKumaratunga cabinet

The Wijetunga cabinet was the central government of Sri Lanka led by President D. B. Wijetunga between 1993 and 1994. It was formed in May 1993 after the assassination of Wijetunga's predecessor Ranasinghe Premadasa and it ended in November 1994 when Wijetunga chose not to contest in the 1994 presidential election. The Wijetunga cabinet saw Sri Lanka's first cohabitation government following the opposition People's Alliance's victory in the 1994 general election.

Cabinet members (UNP Government 1993-1994)

Name Portrait Party Office Took office Left office Refs
!align="center" style="background:Template:United National Party/meta/color;" rowspan=4| D. B. Wijetunga United National Party President 7 May 1993[a] 12 November 1994 [1]
Minister of Finance [b] 31 August 1994 [2]
Minister of Buddhist Affairs [3][4]
Minister of Defence 7 May 1993 12 November 1994 [3][4]
!align="center" style="background:Template:United National Party/meta/color;"| Ranil Wickremesinghe United National Party Prime Minister 7 May 1993 19 August 1994 [5]
!align="center" style="background:Template:United National Party/meta/color;" rowspan=2| A. C. S. Hameed United National Party Minister of Justice [b] August 1993 [6]
Minister of Foreign Affairs August 1993 [6]
!align="center" style="background:Template:United National Party/meta/color;" rowspan=2| Harold Herath United National Party Minister of Foreign Affairs [b] August 1993 [6]
Minister of Justice August 1993 [6]
!align="center" style="background:Template:United National Party/meta/color;" rowspan=2| W. J. M. Lokubandara United National Party Minister of Cultural Affairs and Information [b] August 1993 [6]
Minister of Education and Higher Education August 1993 [6]

Cabinet members (SLFP Government 1994)

Name Portrait Party Office Took office Left office Refs
!align="center" style="background:Template:Sri Lanka Freedom Party/meta/color;" rowspan=3| Chandrika Kumaratunga Sri Lanka Freedom Party Prime Minister 19 August 1994 12 November 1994 [5][7]
Minister of Ethnic Affairs and National Integration 19 August 1994 [3][4]
Minister of Finance and Planning 19 August 1994 [c] [2][3][4]
!align="center" style="background:Template:Sri Lanka Muslim Congress/meta/color;"| M. H. M. Ashraff Sri Lanka Muslim Congress Minister of Shipping, Ports and Rehabilitation 19 August 1994 [3][4]
Srimanee Athulathmudali Democratic United National Front (L) Minister of Transport, Highways, Environment and Women's Affairs 19 August 1994 [3][4][8][9]
!align="center" style="background:Template:Sri Lanka Freedom Party/meta/color;"| Sirimavo Bandaranaike Sri Lanka Freedom Party Minister Without Portfolio 19 August 1994 [3][4][10]
!align="center" style="background:Template:Sri Lanka Freedom Party/meta/color;"| Nimal Siripala de Silva Sri Lanka Freedom Party Minister of Housing, Construction and Public Utilities 19 August 1994 [3][4]
!align="center" style="background:Template:Sri Lanka Freedom Party/meta/color;"| S. B. Dissanayake Sri Lanka Freedom Party Minister of Youth, Sport and Rural Development 19 August 1994 [3][4]
!align="center" style="background:Template:Sri Lanka Freedom Party/meta/color;"| Amarasiri Dodangoda Sri Lanka Freedom Party Minister of Home Affairs, Local Government and Co-operatives 19 August 1994 [3][4]
!align="center" style="background:Template:Sri Lanka Freedom Party/meta/color;"| A. H. M. Fowzie Sri Lanka Freedom Party Minister of Health and Social Services 19 August 1994 [3][4]
!align="center" style="background:Template:Sri Lanka Freedom Party/meta/color;"| C. V. Gunaratne Sri Lanka Freedom Party Minister of Industrial Development 19 August 1994 [3][4]
!align="center" style="background:Template:Sri Lanka Freedom Party/meta/color;"| Indika Gunawardena Sri Lanka Freedom Party Minister of Fisheries and Aquatic Resources 19 August 1994 [3][4]
!align="center" style="background:Template:Sri Lanka Freedom Party/meta/color;"| Lakshman Jayakody Sri Lanka Freedom Party Minister of Cultural and Religious Affairs 19 August 1994 [3][4]
!align="center" style="background:Template:Sri Lanka Freedom Party/meta/color;"| D. M. Jayaratne Sri Lanka Freedom Party Minister of Agriculture, Land and Forestry Conservation 19 August 1994 [3][4]
!align="center" style="background:Template:Sri Lanka Freedom Party/meta/color;"| Lakshman Kadirgamar Sri Lanka Freedom Party Minister of Foreign Affairs 19 August 1994 [3][4]
!align="center" style="background:Template:Sri Lanka Freedom Party/meta/color;"| Richard Pathirana Sri Lanka Freedom Party Minister of Education and Higher Education 19 August 1994 [3][4]
!align="center" style="background:Template:Sri Lanka Freedom Party/meta/color;"| G. L. Peiris Sri Lanka Freedom Party Minister of Justice and Constitutional Affairs 19 August 1994 [3][4]
!align="center" style="background:Template:Sri Lanka Freedom Party/meta/color;"| Mahinda Rajapaksa Sri Lanka Freedom Party Minister of Labour and Vocational Training 19 August 1994 [3][4]
!align="center" style="background:Template:Sri Lanka Freedom Party/meta/color;"| Anuruddha Ratwatte Sri Lanka Freedom Party Minister of Irrigation, Power and Energy 19 August 1994 [3][4]
!align="center" style="background:Template:Sri Lanka Freedom Party/meta/color;"| Mangala Samaraweera Sri Lanka Freedom Party Minister of Posts and Telecommunications 19 August 1994 [3][4]
!align="center" style="background:Template:Sri Lanka Freedom Party/meta/color;"| Dharmasiri Senanayake Sri Lanka Freedom Party Minister of Information, Tourism and Aviation 19 August 1994 [3][4]
!align="center" style="background:Template:Lanka Sama Samaja Party/meta/color;"| Bernard Soysa Lanka Sama Samaja Party Minister of Science Development and Human Resources Development 19 August 1994 [3][4]
!align="center" style="background:Template:Sri Lanka Freedom Party/meta/color;"| Ratnasiri Wickremanayake Sri Lanka Freedom Party Minister of Public Administration and Plantation Affairs 19 August 1994 [3][4][11]
!align="center" style="background:Template:Sri Lanka Freedom Party/meta/color;"| Kingsley Wickramasinghe Sri Lanka Freedom Party Minister of Trade, Commerce and Food 19 August 1994 [3][4]

Notes

  1. ^ Wijetunga was acting president from 1 May 1993 to 7 May 1993.[1]
  2. ^ a b c d Continuation of same office held in previous cabinet.
  3. ^ Continued to hold same office in next cabinet.

References

  1. ^ a b "Heads of State". Parliament of Sri Lanka.
  2. ^ a b "List of Ministers and Deputy Ministers". Ministry of Finance.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y "The New Cabinet" (PDF). Tamil Times. XIII (8): 4. 15 August 1994. ISSN 0266-4488.
  4. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y "The Cabinet" (PDF). The Sri Lanka Monitor (79): 2. August 1994.
  5. ^ a b "Prime Ministers". Parliament of Sri Lanka.
  6. ^ a b c d e f Sebastian, Rita (15 August 1993). "One Hundred Days of Wijetunge's Presidency" (PDF). Tamil Times. XII (8): 4. ISSN 0266-4488.
  7. ^ Gooneratne, John (1 January 2002). "The roadblocks are gone: That's the easier part". The Island.
  8. ^ Wickrematunge, Raisa (28 February 2010). "For Better Or For Worse…". The Sunday Leader.
  9. ^ "Srimani Athulathmudali dies". TamilNet. 1 December 2004.
  10. ^ Thilakarathne, Indeewara (4 March 2007). "Glimpse of History from ANCL Archives : Sirimavo R. D. Bandaranaike – an outstanding stateswoman". Sunday Observer.
  11. ^ Sambandan, V. S. (22 November 2005). "Ratnasiri Wickremanayake appointed Sri Lankan Premier". The Hindu.