Sri Lanka President Maithripala Sirisena has suspended the country's parliament until November 16.
Sirisena took the decision on Saturday hours after he sacked Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe and replaced Wickremesinghe with opposition leader Mahinda Rajapaksa.
Country's cabinet spokesman Rajitha Senaratne said the president has prorogued the parliament with effect from 12 noon on Saturday, report Al Jazeera and Khaleej Times.
Parliamentary officials said the president had suspended all meetings of the 225-member house until November 16.
The move came after Wickremesinghe, who said he remains prime minister, urged the speaker to convene the parliament on Sunday to prove he still retained his parliamentary majority.
Sri Lanka was plunged in a constitutional crisis after Sirisena sacked Wickremesinghe and gave the job to former president Rajapaksa, who was sworn in on Friday night.
Reports said supporters of Rajapaksa stormed several state media institutions and intimidated staff after he was sworn in.
The parliament had been due to meet again on November 5 to unveil the 2019 annual budget.
The suspension could destabilise government finances at a time when the country faces an economic crisis.
In a statement, Parliamentary Speaker Karu Jayasuriya called for calm and restraint and for the crisis to be resolved quickly.
European diplomats in Colombo said they were closely following developments and urged both sides to act in line with the constitution, echoing comments made by the United States.
"The ambassador of the European Union as well as the ambassadors of France, Germany, Italy, the Netherlands, Romania and the UK High Commissioner ... urge all parties to fully act in accordance with Sri Lanka's constitution," they said.
They also urged the rivals to refrain from violence and respect media freedom.
Reports have said supporters of former strongman president Mahinda Rajapakse stormed several state media institutions and intimidated staff after he was sworn in as the new prime minister on Friday night.