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Anti-corruption outfit to report fraud during MR regime to CID

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M.R.Y. Riffai and Swasthika Arulingam

By Saman Indrajith

An outfit calling itself the People’s Movement Against Corruption yesterday said that it would move the CID and Frauds Investigation Bureau of police to recover over 1.5 billion US dollars public funds misappropriated from a state bank by a private company where ousted President Gotabaya Rajapaksa had worked soon after his retirement from the Army.

Convener of the PMAC, M.R.Y. Riffai told The Island that they would complain to the CID and Police Frauds Investigation Bureau about the the misappropriation of public funds soon as there had been no response to a complaint they made to the COPE (Committee on Public Enterprises).

Riffai said that COPE had not acted so far to investigate their complaint of a fraud amounting to millions of US Dollars in the purchase of ATMs purchased from the IT company.

Riffai said the banks Annual Reports had highlighted the purchase at issue between 2008 and 2013, and the contracts for purchasing ATMs from the IT company had been awarded to it outside the established tender procedures.

A now defunct company which was another subsidiary of the company Gotabaya worked for had been given a contract for service and maintenance of tandem servers at the bank in 2009, according to Riffai. Attorney-at-Law Swasthika Arulingam, representing the PAMC, said that the then Chairman of the state bank, awarding contracts to companies he owned at the expense of public funds, investing in debenture stocks issued by the bank and obtaining loans overdrafts was a clear indication of unchecked corruption and misuses of public funds that had taken place between 2008 and 2013.

“One of the main demands of the people during the 2022 Aragalaya was to repatriate the money that had been stolen or lost to the country and our people due to corruption. The Global Financial Integrity (GFI) organization has said Sri Lanka could be losing as much as US $3 billion annually as a result of the illegal movement of money. A GFI report published in 2021 pointed out that an estimated US $40 billion was transferred out of Sri Lanka’s economy between 2009- 2018 through fraudulent invoicing by corporates operating in the import and export sectors. This figure significantly exceeds Sri Lanka’s foreign debt of US $ 34.8 billion in default since April 2022,” she said.



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Creditor receives USD 2.5 mn as Lankan public bears loss from theft of Treasury funds

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Amidst ongoing accusations that the theft of USD 2.5 mn (nearly 1 bn Rupees) from the Treasury hadn’t been properly investigated, The Island learns that the relevant payments had been made to the actual creditor on the instructions of the Finance Ministry.

Confirming the inquiries made by us, authoritative sources said that payments had been made to several accounts through the US banks. Earlier, Sri Lanka released funds to fake foreign accounts in spite of warnings regarding the suspicions about the process.

The funds were part of a bilateral debt repayment to Australia with a settlement due in September 2025. The payment was part of a $ 22.9 million debt settlement.

The lapses occurred in the wake of far reaching changes regarding the debt management functions. In terms of a particular condition of the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Sri Lanka’s debt management functions that had been previously handled by the Central Bank were transferred to a new institution established under the General Treasury—the Public Debt Management Office (PDMO).

Sources said that regardless of the loss of USD 2.5 mn, Sri Lanka couldn’t have defaulted and therefore payments had been made.

Sources who closely followed the issue said that the government owed an explanation and public apology regarding the loss of USD 2.5 mn and how fresh payments were made.

Sources said that the USD 2.5 mn paid to fake accounts had been lost and could never be traced. CoPF Chairman Dr. Harsha de Silva has said that the NPP government has told the IMF that stolen USD 2.5 mn would be recovered from the public by introducing an amendment to the budget.

By Shamindra Ferdinando

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Former Minister Nalin raises defence of double jeopardy

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Nalin Fernando

The Court of Appeal  yesterday (18) postponed until June 25 the hearing of a petition filed by former Minister Nalin Fernando seeking the dismissal of an indictment brought against him by the Attorney General in connection with the controversial ‘Carrom Boards’ case.

The petition was taken up before a bench comprising Justices P. Kumararatnam and Pradeep Hettiarachchi.

Appearing for the petitioner, President’s Counsel Ali Sabry, instructed by Attorney-at-Law Ramzi Bacha, informed court that Fernando had already been convicted and sentenced to 30 years rigorous imprisonment in a case instituted by the Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption (CIABOC) arising from the same incident.

Counsel argued that the Attorney General had subsequently filed a separate case based on the same set of charges and maintained that subjecting an accused person to a second prosecution for the same offence was contrary to law.

He submitted that preliminary objections on the issue had been raised before the Colombo High Court but were dismissed by the trial judge.

The petitioner has therefore sought a declaration from the Court of Appeal that the indictment filed by the Attorney General is unlawful and requested that the charges be set aside.

The court directed that the matter be called again on June 25, when the Attorney General is expected to present submissions on the petition.

The case stems from allegations that during the 2015 presidential election campaign, 14,000 carrom boards and 11,000 checkers boards were imported and distributed through Lanka Sathosa outlets for allocation to political offices of former President Mahinda Rajapaksa, resulting in an estimated loss of Rs. 39 million to the State.

Based on those allegations, the Attorney General has instituted proceedings against Fernando before the Colombo High Court under the Public Property Act.

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UNP asks whether govt. obtained findings of FBI probe into 2019 Easter Sunday carnage

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The UNP yesterday called on the government to clarify whether it had sought access to evidence and documents gathered during a United States investigation into the 2019 Easter Sunday terrorist attacks.

In a statement, the UNP has recalled that then Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe requested the U.S. government to conduct a comprehensive investigation into the attacks immediately after they occurred, citing limitations in local investigative capacity. A similar request was also made during a telephone conversation with then U.S. President Donald Trump on April 22, 2019, the statement said.

According to the UNP, the Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) subsequently carried out an extensive investigation in collaboration with Sri Lankan agencies, including the Criminal Investigation Department (CID), Military Intelligence and the State Intelligence Service. The findings were later submitted to the Sri Lankan authorities and accepted by the relevant institutions.

The party noted that FBI Special Agent Merrilee R. Godwin had filed a 71-page affidavit before the U.S. District Court for the Central District of California in November 2020 following a two-year investigation. A criminal case was later instituted in Los Angeles naming suspects who had already been taken into custody in Sri Lanka.

Pointing out that material collected during the U.S. investigation remains in the possession of the FBI and the U.S. Department of Justice, the UNP has asked the government whether it formally requested access to those records after reopening investigations into the attacks.

The UNP has stressed the importance of making the documents available to Sri Lankan judicial authorities, arguing that they could assist efforts to establish the full circumstances surrounding the Easter Sunday attacks.

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