Sri
Lanka's current president Mahinda Rajapaksa has conceded defeat to
rival Maithripala Sirisena in the country's presidential election,
bringing an end to a decade of leadership increasingly criticized as
corrupt and nepotistic.
Rajapaksa
acknowledged the defeat on his official Twitter account Friday,
writing: "I value and respect our democratic process and the people's
verdict, and look forward to the peaceful transition of power."
Sirisena
would be sworn in at 6 p.m. local time in Colombo's Independence
Square, Dhanushka Ramanayake, the head of his media unit, said.
The
defeat of the once untouchable president, the longest-serving political
leader in the region, was the result of a failed electoral gamble.
In
November, the 69-year-old called elections two years earlier than
required, only to be shocked by the defection of many key political
allies, including the man who would unseat him.
The defections apparently wrong-footed Rajapaksa, and the opposition had the better of the campaign, say analysts.
"He
didn't expect the candidate to be Sirisena," said Paikiasothy
Saravanamuttu, executive director of Sri Lanka's Center for Policy
Alternatives.
"I think he probably underestimated the disaffection in the country and the desire for change."
Unexpected departure
Sirisena,
63, served as general-secretary of Rajapaksa's Sri Lanka Freedom Party
and health minister in his cabinet, before switching allegiance to a
broad opposition alliance that proved to be the former president's most
serious political challenge.
The
unwieldy coalition includes the center-right United National Party, the
hardline Sinhala Buddhist Jathika Hela Urumaya as well as parties
representing the substantial Tamil and Muslim minorities.
The alliance could prove fractious as Sirisena pursues his ambitious agenda, said political scientist Dayan Jayatilleka.
"Sirisena
not only has this coalition to hold together, he has to do so having
promised a fast-track program of drastic political reform," he said.
"One doesn't know how this coalition will handle that."
During
a campaign focused on Rajapaksa's perceived nepotism and dynastic
urges, Sirisena pledged to weaken the powers of the presidency, crack
down on corruption and hold fresh parliamentary election within 100
days.
'Heartland appeal'
A
former Maoist, Sirisena was jailed as a young political activist,
before being entering mainstream politics and being elected as a
parliamentarian in 1989.
The
farmer-turned-politician comes from a humble background in the
rice-producing North Central Province -- credentials that appealed to
Rajapaksa's political base in the Sinhalese heartland, said Jayatilleka.
"He's
a Sinhala Buddhist from a peasant background -- you couldn't get more
mainstream than that in Sri Lankan politics," he said.
"He's someone that the Sinhalese would trust."
But
he also had the overwhelming backing of the country's substantial Tamil
and Muslim minorities, who had been alienated by Rajapaksa's perceived
failure to advance national reconciliation efforts in the wake of the
country's decades-long civil war, and perceived tolerance of hardline
Buddhist extremists blamed for stoking anti-Muslim violence.
Luster faded
Rajapaksa
was elected president in 2005 and returned to office in 2010, a year
after government forces routed the Tamil Tigers rebels to end the
country's 25-year civil war.
The victory remained his main political asset, contributing to a "rock star appeal," said Jayatilleke.
But
in recent years, the luster seemed to have faded for voters, with
criticisms that his presidency had become increasingly authoritarian,
power-hungry and dynastic.
Three of
Rajapaksa's brothers occupied powerful positions: Basil as the Minister
of Economic Development, Gotabaya as Defense Secretary and Chamal as the
Speaker of Parliament.
Following his
2010 reelection, in which he earned 58% of the vote, an emboldened
Rajapaksa amended the constitution to concentrate power in the
presidential office and remove term limits, allowing for a tilt at an
unprecedented third term.
Many Sri
Lankans felt the move excessive, said Saravanamuttu. "They want the
force of the executive president trimmed or abolished."
Congratulations flow
World leaders were quick to offer their congratulations to the incoming president.
Indian
Prime Minister Narendra Modi tweeted that he had called Sirisena, and
congratulated "the people of Sri Lanka on the peaceful & democratic
poll process."
U.S. Secretary of State
John Kerry congratulated Rajapaksa on accepting the results "in the
proud tradition of peaceful and orderly transfers of power," and said he
looked forward to working with Sirisena on implementing his platform of
building a "Sri Lanka that is peaceful, inclusive, democratic, and
prosperous."
Jayatilleke said there was
a sense of satisfaction in Sri Lanka that, five years after the end of a
decades-long civil war, the country had witnessed a smooth transfer of
power.
"That's something that any society can be proud of," he said.

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