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Ex-UK HC to SL, Gladstone, 87, in legal wrangle over property inherited from late wife

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… seeks to regain £15m mansion from ‘surrogate daughter’

One-time British High Commissioner to Sri Lanka (1987-1991) David Gladstone, 87, has moved the High Court of UK to regain Wotton House, in Buckinghamshire, a Grade 1 listed mansion worth 15 mn pounds, from Leigh White, 55, who steadfastly refused the vacate it, The Telegraph has reported.

India McTaggart dealt with Gladstone’s costly legal bid in a story headlined ‘Retired ambassador in row with ‘surrogate daughter’ living in his £15m mansion,’ according to The Telegaph report date-lined Nov. 07.

White, a lawyer by profession, moved into Wotton House, in 2017, on the invitation of Gladstone, whose neighbours included Sir Tony Blair, former British Premier. Gladstone and Leigh had become friends in the early 1990s.

According to The Telegraph, Gladstone originally invited his ‘surrogate daughter,’ Leigh White, to move in to help manage the estate.

The former diplomat, who moved up north during the first lockdown, to shield from Covid-19, now wants to move back but couldn’t do so due to White’s refusal to leave.

Lawyer White has claimed she has a right to stay as ‘successor and heiress’ to Gladstone’s fortune, The Telegraph reported.

The late President Ranasinghe Premadasa declared Gladstone, a grandson of popular 19th Century Liberal British Prime Minister William Gladstone, persona non grata in 1991 alleging he interfered in violence marred Local Government polls in the Southern Province.

During a two-week trial at the High Court, according to The Telegraph, Justice Trower heard that Gladstone and his late wife April’s friendship with White flourished through shared interests in Sri Lanka, classical music and theatre.

The property, which dates from 1714, had been in Mrs Gladstone’s family for over half a century, and boasts famous neighbours in Sir Tony and Cherie Blair as well as extensive grounds with pleasure gardens and two lakes, The Telegraph reported. Gladstone inherited the property, in 2014, following the death of his wife April. The Blairs moved in 2008.

The Court has been told since 2007 onwards, Gladstone repeatedly assured White that Wotton House, and two other properties, making up his £20 million estate, would go to her when he died, The Telegraph reported.

White is on record as having claimed that Gladstone – who she said treated her as a ‘surrogate daughter’ – promised it would be hers, a claim the former diplomat disputed. Gladstone says he is “desperate” to spend his final years there.

Gladstone has sued White, who currently lives at the property with her son and husband, for possession of the house.

White has countersued at the High Court, alleging Gladstone must have forgotten his earlier promises due to old age.

Penelope Reed KC, Ms White’s barrister, highlighted a lunch at the National Liberal Club that year “when David asked her if she would take on Wotton when he and April died, which she reasonably understood as meaning she would inherit it”.

It was only after he moved to Cumbria to shield with his new wife, Mary, during the first lockdown that the relationship and Gladstone’s inheritance plans changed unexpectedly, The Telegraph quoted White as having said.

Gladstone demanded White move out so he could move in with Mary and announced he had written a new will, placing his estate into a discretionary trust for the benefit of his family, leaving nothing for White, The Telegraph reported.

Her barrister, Reed, said it would be ‘unconscionable’ for Gladstone to go back on his alleged promises, arguing that Ms White had harmed her career as a lawyer on the basis that she was to inherit the estate.

But for Gladstone, Tracey Angus KC denied that there had ever been a promise that White would inherit Wotton herself and, as a lawyer, she must have understood that he intended for it to go into trust “for many generations”.

She said the alleged promise that she would “take on” Wotton at the Liberal Club “could not reasonably have been interpreted” as a promise that she would inherit Wotton outright or have any right to live there before his death.

Gladstone denies that he asked her to move in to more closely manage the house, pointing out that he had managed it for many years while living part-time in London.

The court heard that White gradually assumed a tighter hold over Mr Gladstone’s estate and financial affairs after moving in, “including sacking his long-standing accountant and appointing (her husband) in his place,” the barrister said.

“White refused to move out and instead appears to have decided the house was her and her son’s primary residence,” claimed the KC, who added that she was then joined at Wotton by her husband “at some point during 2022”.

“He desperately wants to spend what remains of his life at Wotton…David’s relationship with White has broken down irretrievably.

“Regardless of who is at fault for this, David cannot return to Wotton whilst Ms White is there and it is unfair to exclude him from his home,” she said.

As well as the fight over the future of the house, Gladstone has also sought the return of about £800,000 in bonds which he transferred to White, saying they were made at a time when she was in the “ascendancy over him” due to his age.

The Telegraph

reported that Gladstone also wants White removed from her position as trustee of a “heritage property maintenance fund” established for the purpose of maintaining Wotton.

The judge is expected to deliver a ruling on the case at a later date.



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‘Investigations won’t be stopped due to protests’

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Easter Sunday carnage:

Investigations into the 2019 Easter Sunday terror attacks will not be halted due to protests, demonstrations or Satyagraha campaigns, Minister of Public Security Ananda Wijepala told Parliament yesterday (10), while alleging that investigators had gathered sufficient evidence to establish the involvement of former State Intelligence Service (SIS) Director, retired Major General Suresh Sallay, in a conspiracy linked to the attacks.

Making a special ministerial statement in the House, the Minister said that evidence uncovered during ongoing investigations indicated that Sallay had prior knowledge of the planned attacks and related extremist activities before the coordinated bombings that claimed more than 270 lives and injured hundreds of others, on April 21, 2019.

Wijepala claimed that three weeks before the attacks, Sallay had deployed four Muslim individuals to gather intelligence, including information on the number of worshippers attending mass at a church in Negombo.

According to the Minister, the principal individual among the four had been identified by witnesses to the CID as an ISIS extremist and had subsequently gone missing following the Easter Sunday attacks.

“There is evidence suggesting that Major General Sallay met the informant who had tipped off Army Intelligence regarding the attacks at a hotel in Colombo,” Wijepala said.

The Minister maintained that investigators had uncovered evidence indicating that Sallay had taken steps to prevent the disclosure of information that could have revealed crucial details relating to the attacks and the events leading up to them.

Referring to allegations that Sallay had been subjected to inhumane treatment while in custody, Wijepala rejected such claims, describing them as false and misleading.

He told Parliament that the former intelligence chief had been afforded all facilities and privileges due to a primary suspect under the law, including unrestricted access to legal counsel.

“The Magistrate personally visited Sallay to ascertain his health and wellbeing. At no stage did he complained of any inhumane treatment. Neither has he lodged complaints with any other relevant authority in that regard,” the Minister said.

Wijepala also disclosed that Sallay had thus far declined to provide investigators with the passwords to his laptop computer and mobile phone, a move he described as an attempt to obstruct the investigative process.

“He is acting in a manner that hinders the progress of investigations,” the Minister alleged.

The Public Security Minister maintained that the government remained committed to uncovering the full truth behind the Easter Sunday attacks and bringing all those responsible before the law, irrespective of their status or position.

Emphasising that the investigation would continue without interference, Wijepala said attempts to exert pressure through public protests or Satyagraha campaigns would not influence the course of the inquiry.

“The investigations into the Easter Sunday attacks will not be halted by any protests or Satyagraha,” he said.

By Saman Indrajith

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267,138 Lankan children dropped out of school system between 2018 and 2024

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A total of 267,138 children dropped out of the school system between 2018 and 2024, Prime Minister and Minister of Education Dr. Harini Amarasuriya informed Parliament yesterday (10).

Responding to a question raised by SJB Ratnapura District SJB MP Hesha Withanage, the Prime Minister said that the government did not possess definitive data on school dropouts from 2010 to the early part of 2017.

She explained that the figures for the period from 2018 to 2024 had been derived from annual school census reports using an internationally recognised methodology that takes into account student enrolment figures and dropout rates from Grade One to Grade Ten.

According to the statistics presented to Parliament, 38,839 students dropped out of school in 2018,

while the figure increased to 41,503 in 2019. In 2020, the number stood at 32,540 before declining further to 25,492 in 2021.

However, a sharp increase was recorded in 2022, when 52,596 students were identified as having left the school system. The figure remained high in 2023 at 50,345 before declining to 25,823 in 2024.

The Prime Minister cautioned that the figures did not necessarily indicate that all students classified as dropouts had completely discontinued their education.

She noted that some students may have transferred to schools in other provinces, enrolled in international schools, or migrated overseas with their families while continuing their studies.

Dr. Amarasuriya said that such cases could not be separately identified under the methodology used to compile the statistics and were, therefore, included in the overall dropout figures.

Addressing the causes of school dropouts, the Prime Minister said a range of factors contributed to students leaving the formal education system.

These included personal circumstances, school-related issues, family and economic difficulties, social influences, as well as students opting for alternative educational pathways and training opportunities, she said.

By Saman Indrajith

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PM declares PC polls only under new electoral system

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Prime Minister Harini Amarasuriya told Parliament yesterday that Provincial Council elections would not be conducted under the existing proportional representation system and would instead be held under a new electoral system.

Responding to a question raised by MP Ravi Karunanayake, the Prime Minister said there was no justification for holding elections without ensuring adequate representation for women and youth in Provincial Councils.

She said that the government’s position was to first finalise reforms to the electoral system before proceeding with polls.

The Prime Minister also provided a detailed breakdown of when the terms of Provincial Councils expired, noting that all nine councils had been without elected administrations for several years. According to her, the Sabaragamuwa Provincial Council term ended on September 29, 2017, followed by the Eastern and North Central Councils on September 30 and October 1, 2017 respectively.

The Central and North Western Provincial Councils ended their terms on October 08 and 10, 2018, while the Northern Provincial Council term ended on October 24, 2018. The Southern Provincial Council term expired on April 10, 2019, followed by the Western Provincial Council on April 21, 2019, and the Uva Provincial Council on October 8, 2019.

Amarasuriya said that under Section 10(a) of the Provincial Councils Elections Act No. 2 of 1988, the Election Commission was required to publish a notice of intention to hold an election within one week after the dissolution or expiry of a council, following a direction from the President.

However, she noted that the Election Commission had not issued such notices due to the absence of enabling legal provisions following subsequent amendments.

She further explained that under Section 3A of the Provincial Councils Elections (Amendment) Act No. 17 of 2017, the holding of elections is linked to the completion of a delimitation process. This requires the appointment of a Delimitation Committee by the President to define electorates within administrative districts and submit its report to Parliament, with elections to be held only after parliamentary approval.

The Prime Minister said the delimitation process has not yet been completed, which has prevented the conduct of Provincial Council elections under the revised framework.

Amarasuriya also informed Parliament that a parliamentary select committee had been appointed to examine and make recommendations on whether Provincial Council elections could be conducted under the previous electoral system through further amendments to existing legislation.

The committee, titled the “Select Committee of Parliament to look into and report to Parliament on the matter of selecting the Electoral System under which the Provincial Council Elections should be held and submit its proposals and recommendations in that regard,” comprises MPs Vijitha Herath (Chairman), Nizam Kariapper, Chandana Sooriyarachchi, Darmapriya Wijesinghe, Samanmali Gunasingha, Shanakiyan Rasamanickam, Lakshman Nipuna Arachchi, Mano Ganesan, Ranjith Madduma Bandara, Arun Hemachandra, Sunil Watagala and Muneer Mulaffer.

She said further decisions regarding the holding of Provincial Council elections will be taken based on the recommendations of the parliamentary select committee.

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