Batticaloa Municipal Council | |
Coa Pic: | Batticaloa Municipal Council Logo.png |
House Type: | Local authority |
Leader1 Type: | Mayor of Batticaloa |
Leader1: | Saravanabawan Thiyagarajah |
Party1: | Ilankai Tamil Arasu kadsi |
Election1: | 2018.04.05 |
Leader2 Type: | Deputy Mayor of Batticaloa |
Leader2: | Kandasamy Sathiyaseelan |
Party2: | Ilankai Tamil Arasu kadsi |
Election2: | 2018.04.05 |
Leader3 Type: | Municipal Commissioner |
Leader3: | Eng.N.Sivalingam (SLAS I) |
Leader4 Type: | Municipal Deputy Commissioner |
Leader4: | U. Sivarajah (SLAS-II) |
Members: | 38 |
Last Election1: | 10 February 2018 |
Website: | https://batticaloa.mc.gov.lk/ |
Batticaloa Municipal Council (BMC) is the local authority for the city of Batticaloa in eastern Sri Lanka.[1] BMC is responsible for providing a variety of local public services including roads, sanitation, drains, housing, libraries, public parks and recreational facilities. It has 19 members elected using the open list proportional representation system. The territory of BMC is commensurate with that of Manmunai North Divisional Secretariat.[2]
Batticaloa was administered by a local board between 1884 and 1932.[3] The city was promoted to an Urban Council with eight wards in 1933.[3] The number of wards was increased to 10 in 1944. In 1956 the territory of the council was increased as well as the number of wards to 14. The council was merged with Manmunai North – East (Northern Portion) Village Council in 1967 and promoted to a Municipal Council.[3] BMC had 19 wards. The first mayor of BMC was Chelliah Rajadurai, the local Member of Parliament.
The council was dissolved in 1974 and administered by special commissioners until 1983 when local elections were held.[3] All members of the council resigned shortly after the election. Batticaloa was once again administered by special commissioners, this time until 1994 when local elections were held.[3] In 1988 BMC absorbed Valaieravu Rural Council. The council was dissolved on 31 March 1999. Special commissioners administered the city until 2008 when elections were held.
See main article: List of Mayors of Batticaloa.
The Mayor of Batticaloa is the head of Batticaloa Municipal Council.[3]
The following were some of the city's commissioners and secretaries:[3]
Results of the local government election held on 18 May 1983:[4]
valign=bottom align=left colspan=2 | Alliances and parties ! | valign=bottom align=center width="60" | Votes ! | valign=bottom align=center width="50" | % ! | valign=bottom align=center | Seats |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
bgcolor= | Tamil United Liberation Front | 10,993 | 62.75% | 13 | |||
bgcolor= | United National Party | 6,229 | 35.55% | 6 | |||
Independent | 298 | 1.70% | 0 | ||||
Valid Votes | 17,520 | 100.00% | 19 | ||||
Rejected Votes | 62 | ||||||
Total Polled | 17,582 | ||||||
Registered Electors | 22,894 | ||||||
Turnout | 76.80% |
All members of the council resigned one month after being sworn in.[3] Batticaloa didn't have an elected local government for sporadic periods, this was due to various reasons.[5] Aljazeera, the Asiafoundation and the Daily Mirror attribute this to civil war;[6] [7] Reuters and the US State Department attribute this to calls for election boycotts by the LTTE (enforced with brutal reprisals for non-compliance)[8] [9] and the Tamilnet attribute it to The Sri Lankan government's suspension of all local government in the north and east of the country in 1983 using Emergency Regulations.[10] Batticaloa was administered by special commissioners until 1994 when local elections were held.[3] The council was dissolved on 31 March 1999. Special commissioners administered the city until the 2008 elections.
Results of the local government election held on 10 March 2008:[11]
valign=bottom align=left colspan=2 | Alliances and parties ! | valign=bottom align=center width="60" | Votes ! | valign=bottom align=center width="50" | % ! | valign=bottom align=center | Seats |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
bgcolor= | United People's Freedom Alliance (TMVP et al.) | 14,158 | 53.77% | 11 | |||
Independent 1 (EPDP, EPRLF (P), PLOTE) | 9,601 | 36.46% | 6 | ||||
bgcolor= | Sri Lanka Muslim Congress | 1,788 | 6.79% | 1 | |||
bgcolor= | Eelavar Democratic Front (EROS) | 427 | 1.62% | 1 | |||
National Development Front | 291 | 1.11% | 0 | ||||
Independent 3 | 43 | 0.16% | 0 | ||||
Independent 2 | 23 | 0.09% | 0 | ||||
Valid Votes | 26,331 | 100.00% | 19 | ||||
Rejected Votes | 2,822 | ||||||
Total Polled | 29,153 | ||||||
Registered Electors | 54,948 | ||||||
Turnout | 53.06% |
The following candidates were elected:[12] Sivageetha "Pathmini" Prabhakaran (UPFA-TMVP), 4,722 preference votes (pv); Sellappillai "Chelliah" Aseerwatham (Ind 1), 949 pv; Kandiah Arumailingam (Ind 1-EPDP); Edwin Silva Krishnanandaraja alias Piratheep Master (UPFA-TMVP), 3,805 pv; John Baptist Fernando (UPFA); Abiragam George Pillai (UPFA); Namasivayam Karunanantham (UPFA); Thambiaiah Kirubarajah (UPFA); Maylvakanam Niskanandararajah (Ind 1); Rajanathan Prabhakaran (EROS); Wellington Rajendra Prasad (UPFA); Kanagasabai Preman (UPFA); Nagoor Khan Ramlan (SLMC); Pragasam Sagayamany alias Killi Master (UPFA-TMVP); Devanayagam Weerasingam Sathyananthan (UPFA); Mahendiramoorthy Suthenthiran (Ind 1); Kandasamy Thavarasa (UPFA); Benadit Thanabalasingam (Ind 1); and R. Thurairatnam (Ind 1-EPRLF).
Sivageetha Prabhakaran (UPFA-TMVP) and Edwin Silva Krishnanandaraja (UPFA-TMVP) were appointed Mayor and Deputy Mayor respectively.[13]
Edwin Silva Krishnanandaraja of UPFA-TMVP resigned as a member of BMC and was replaced by Selvarasa Sasikumar.[14] He was replaced as Deputy Mayor by Abiragam George Pillai (UPFA).[15]
R. Thurairatnam (Ind 1-EPRLF) resigned to contest the Eastern provincial council elections. He was replaced by Kandasamy Mahenthiraraja (Ind 1).[16]