Claiming that President Maithripala Sirisena government has no mandate to introduce the new constitution, hardline monk Maagalkande Sudaththa told media here the country's influential Buddhists are going from district-to-district to educate their followers about the "dangers" of the proposed Constitution.
The hardline monks vowed to back the opposition mounted by the monk leaders against the government's move to change the island's constitution.
They threatened to hold street protests against the government's decision.
Government spokesman and Health Minister Rajitha Senaratne said theparliament will not reverse theprocess begun in April last year to draft the Constitution.
"The government got 6.2 million votes to change the constitution," Senaratne had said.
"The monks can have their views, but the people's mandate at two elections in 2015 was to change the Constitution. We will not work against the people's will just because Buddhist monks want us to do so," he had said.
Sri Lankan parliament had converted itself into a constitutional assembly to draft a new Constitution to replace the existing 1978 Constitution.
Suddhaththa said about 70 per cent of MPs in the 225- member parliament are a "asleep" when important issues are discussed. He accused them of being "uneducated".
Nearly 70 per cent of the island's population is Buddhist.
The latest move by the Buddhist community is a new challenge to the government of Sirisena who himself is a Buddhist and is committed to ethnic unity.
All such attempts since 1958 have been scuttled by Buddhist monks who took the ant-reform platform driving the Sinhala majority to oppose the blue prints for power sharing.
This led to a bloody armed conflict waged by the LTTE to carve out a separate Tamil state in the north and east provinces.
The LTTE was militarily defeated in 2009, yet the root causes of the conflict remain to be addressed.
The Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) ran a nearly three-decade separatist campaign leading to a bloody war with the Sri Lankan security forces.
According to the UN figures, up to 40,000 civilians were killed by the security forces during former president Mahinda Rajapaksa's regime that brought an end to the brutal conflict with the defeat of the LTTE in 2009.
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