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Easter Sunday carnage could have been averted if Parliament had heeded 2016 warning: Wijeyadasa

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Dr. Rajapakshe

By Shamindra Ferdinando

Former Justice, Prison Affairs and Constitutional Reforms Minister Dr. Wijeyadasa Rajapakshe, PC, yesterday (22) said that a genuine effort should be made to ascertain why the first warning regarding Sri Lankan extremists’ direct link with ISIS was ignored by Parliament.

“Those who are harping on Easter Sunday masterminds and grand conspiracies have conveniently forgotten that the alleged link was exposed in Parliament on Nov, 18, 2016, by me in my then capacity as Justice, Prison Affairs and Constitutional Reforms Minister,” Dr Rajapakshe said .

The one-time President of the Bar Association said that he had made that declaration after confirming the developing situation with the then head of the Directorate of Military Intelligence (DMI).

Dr. Rajapakshe said that “instead of immediately launching an investigation, the Yahapalana government targeted me.” The former Minister named the then Cabinet spokesman Dr. Rajitha Senarathna as one of the culprits who had publicly dismissed the warning he had issued in Parliament.

“The truth is the top Yahapalana leadership, particularly Premier Ranil Wickremesinghe, lacked the courage to go ahead with an investigation as almost all Muslim MPs, irrespective of the parties they represented, demanded my removal from the Cabinet-of-Ministers,” the ex-MP said.

The former Minister said that his disclosure in Parliament, regarding a group of 32 Muslims, from four affluent families, joining ISIS, also contributed to his removal from Cabinet in late August 2017 after he opposed handing over of the Hambantota Port to China, on a 99-year lease, for USD 1.2 bn.

Rajapakshe alleged that he hadn’t received the backing of any MP though, at one point, John Seneviratne, who represented the Joint Opposition at the Constitutional Council, agreed with him the developing extremist threat was such that Pujith Jayasundera was incapable of handling the situation.

The former lawmaker said that he opposed Jayasundera’s appointment as the IGP, made in April 2016, even before his explosive revelation in Parliament, as the extremist threat was growing.

The President’s Counsel said that following his disclosure in Parliament, the then President called for a briefing from the then Director of State Intelligence Service (SIS) DIG Nilantha Jayawardena. “I was also present at the National Security Council meeting when the SIS Chief declared that there was no basis for my warning. Obviously the President and the Premier accepted the SIS Chief’s assertion.”

The former Minister said that the ongoing Easter Sunday cases, numbering over 40, could be undermined if the powers that be played politics with the issues at hand.

During P CoI proceedings, the inquiry had been told that the police sought the Attorney General’s Department advice regarding Zahran Hashim’s activities, particularly in the East, in June 2017, but the matter was never addressed till the Easter Sunday blasts in April 2017, the ex-MP said.

If police perused media reports, since the disclosure made in Parliament in Nov. 2016, those who opposed the ISIS exposure could be easily identified, he said.

Could the NPP government explain the circumstances the father of two of the seven suicide bombers had been included in its National List at the 2015 general election? the former Minister asked.

Former AG Dappula de Livera, PC, too, should explain why he refused to cooperate with the Terrorist Investigation Division (TID) after having called the Easter Sunday attacks a grand conspiracy on the eve of his retirement on May 24, 2021, the former Minister said. “I wanted the police to record his statement as his claim threatened to undermine the entire investigation,” the ex-Minister said, adding that the Easter Sunday carnage could have been averted if major political parties and groups adopted a common stand against extremism.

Rajapakshe pointed out that even after the detection of explosives at Wanathawilluwa, in mid 2019, the Yahapalana government continued to shield extremist elements.



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Accountant and Management Assistant in bribery net

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An accountant and a management assistant at the Mullaitivu District Hospital were arrested by the sleuths of the Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption for allegedly soliciting and accepting a bribe of Rs. 30,000 to release a cheque intended as the March payment for doing the laundry at the hospital.

The arrests were made at the Hospital’s Accounts Division on 18 April

Acting on a complaint lodged by a businessman in the Mullaitivu area, the CIABOC officers arrested the suspects.

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UNP turns down SJB’s call for joint May Day rally in view of Poya Day

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UNP leader Ranil Wickremesinghe has turned down SJB leader Sajith Premadasa’s invitation for his party to join the SJB-led May Day rally at P.D. Sirisena ground.

On behalf of the UNP, its General Secretary and former MP Thalatha Atukorale has issued a letter explaining their decision not to join the rally.

Atukorale has said that as May Day falls on a Poya Day this year, the UNP has previously decided to dedicate the day to religious observances.

She has recalled that during his tenure as Prime Minister, the late Ranasinghe Premadasa emphasised that it was inappropriate to engage in political activities when May Day coincided with a Poya Day.

Accordingly, she informed the SJB leadership that the UNP would not be able to participate in the May Day rally organized by the Samagi Jana Balawegaya or any other political party.

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Nursing mother remanded over Jaffna MP’s complaint

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A nursing mother has been remanded by the Mallakam Magistrate’s Court over a land dispute following a complaint lodged by independent Jaffna MP Dr Archchuna Ramanathan, who was filmed brandishing a firearm during a confrontation with residents.

The incident took place on Saturday in the Periyavilan area, within the Ilavalai Police Division, on land claimed by the MP as ancestral property. According to Ramanathan, he had entered the plot to carry out clearing work when he was confronted by local residents who opposed his presence, alleging encroachment and disputing his actions, Tamil Guardian reported.

Eyewitness accounts and widely circulated video footage show a heated altercation between the MP and a group that included several women. During the confrontation, Ramanathan produced a handgun, reportedly issued by the Ministry of Defence for personal protection, an act that has drawn sharp criticism given the civilian nature of the dispute and the absence of firearms among those present.

Despite the presence of multiple individuals at the scene, it was a woman, identified in court as the mother of a one-year-old child, who was arrested after Ramanathan filed a complaint with Ilavalai Police. She was subsequently produced before the Mallakam Magistrate’s Court, which ordered her remanded until April 29.

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