News
Udaya to release two probe committee reports today
Easter Sunday terrorist bombings:
Leader of the Pivithuru Hela Urumaya and former MP Udaya Gammanpila yesterday said that an ultimatum he had issued to the government in respect of two probe committee reports on the Easter Sunday bombings had gone unheeded, and therefore he would be compelled to release the two documents on Monday (21).
Speaking to the media yesterday Gammanpila said, “The time I have given the President to release the two reports, which he is hesitant to make public regarding the Easter attacks, ends at 10.00 a.m. on Monday.” He emphasised that the President had until 10 a.m. on Monday to fulfil his constitutional responsibility.
Gammanpila said, “If the President violates Article 38 of the Constitution and fails to meet that deadline, I will certainly make them public.” He expressed concern over threats of incarceration under the Prevention of Terrorism Act and the Official Secrets Act. “I have consulted legal experts, and they have pointed out that this could lead to a 14-year jail sentence. However, I believe the people’s right to know is more important, so I am willing to take the risk and will release the reports after the deadline.”
Gammanpila said that Dissanayake, as an MP, had called for the release of the reports on the Easter Sunday terror attacks. Church Spokesman Fr. Cyril Gamini Fernando had also previously advocated for their release. “Now, they seem less enthusiastic about it. There are seri
ous doubts about whether the release of these reports will be detrimental to the interests of the NPP government and the Church. However, these reports are of national importance and do not belong to any party. They are public property, and the people have the right to know.”
Gammanpila said that the unpublished reports prepared by two probe committees headed by I.M. Imam and A.N.J. de Alwis.
In June 2023, the then President Ranil Wickremesinghe established a Committee of Inquiry to investigate the actions and responses of the intelligence and security services.
Retired Judge A.N.J. de Alwis was tasked with investigating the conduct of the State Intelligence Service (SIS), the Chief of National Intelligence (CNI), and other relevant authorities.
At the time of the Easter Sunday attacks, Senior DIG Nilantha Jayawardena led the SIS, while retired DIG Sisira Mendis served as the CNI, a role previously held by intelligence veteran General Kapila Hendawitharana.
In September, Wickremesinghe appointed a three-member committee to investigate allegations made by Britain’s Channel 4 regarding the alleged involvement of military intelligence in the Easter Sunday attacks. The President’s announcement followed a denial issued by the Ministry of Defence on behalf of the government.
The Committee, chaired by retired Supreme Court Judge Syed Ishrat Imam, also included retired Air Chief Marshal Jayalath Weerakkody, a former Commander of the Sri Lanka Air Force (SLAF), and President’s Counsel Harsha Soza. Senior Assistant Secretary to the President Sarthanjali Maheswaran served as the Commission’s Secretary.
News
GL: Proposed anti-terror laws will sound death knell for democracy
‘Media freedom will be in jeopardy’
Former Minister of Justice, Constitutional Affairs, National Integration and Foreign Affairs Prof. G. L. Peiris has warned that the proposed Protection of the State from Terrorism Act (PSTA) will deal a severe blow to civil liberties and democratic rights, particularly media freedom and the overall freedom of expression.
Addressing a press conference organised by the joint opposition alliance “Maha Jana Handa” (Voice of the People) in Colombo, Prof. Peiris said the proposed legislation at issue had been designed “not to protect people from terrorism but to protect the State.”
Prof. Peiris said that the proposed law would sound the death knell for the rights long enjoyed by citizens, with journalists and media institutions likely to be among those worst affected.
Prof. Peiris took exception to what he described as the generous use of the concept of “recklessness” in the draft, particularly in relation to the publication of statements and dissemination of material. He argued that recklessness was recognised in criminal jurisprudence as a state of mind distinct from intention and its scope was traditionally limited.
“In this draft, it becomes yet another lever for the expansion of liability well beyond the properly designated category of terrorist offences,” Prof. Peiris said, warning that the elasticity of the term could expose individuals to prosecution on tenuous grounds.
Prof. Peiris was particularly critical of a provision enabling a suspect already in judicial custody to be transferred to police custody on the basis of a detention order issued by the Defence Secretary.
According to the proposed laws such a transfer could be justified on the claim that the suspect had committed an offence prior to arrest of which police were previously unaware, he said.
“The desirable direction of movement is from police to judicial custody. Here, the movement is in the opposite direction,” Prof. Peiris said, cautioning that although the authority of a High Court Judge was envisaged, the pressures of an asserted security situation could render judicial oversight ineffective in practice.
Describing the draft as “a travesty rather than a palliative,” Prof. Peiris said the government had reneged on assurances that reform would address longstanding concerns about existing counter-terrorism legislation. Instead of removing objectionable features, he argued, the new bill introduced additional provisions not found in the current Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA).
Among them is a clause empowering the Defence Secretary to designate “prohibited places”. That was a power not contained in the PTA but previously exercised, if at all, under separate legislation such as the Official Secrets Act of 1955. Entry into such designated places, as well as photographing, video recording, sketching or drawing them, would constitute an offence punishable by up to three years’ imprisonment or a fine of up to Rs. 3 million. Prof. Peiris said. Such provision would have a “particularly chilling effect” on journalists and media personnel, he noted.
The former minister and law professor also criticised the breadth of offences defined under the draft, noting that it sought to create 13 categories of acts carrying the label of terrorism. This, he said, blurred the critical distinction between ordinary criminal offences and acts of terrorism, which require “clear and unambiguous definition with no scope for elasticity of interpretation.”
He cited as examples offences such as serious damage to public property, robbery, extortion, theft, and interference with electronic or computerised systems—acts which, he argued, were already adequately covered under existing penal laws and did not necessarily amount to terrorism.
Ancillary offences, too, had been framed in sweeping terms, Prof. Peiris said. The draft legislation, dealing with acts ‘associated with terrorism,’ imposed liability on persons “concerned in” the commission of a terrorist offence. “This is a vague phrase and catch-all in nature.” he noted.
Similarly, under the subheading ‘Encouragement of Terrorism,’ with its reference to “indirect encouragement,” could potentially encompass a broad spectrum of protest activity, Prof. Peiris maintained, warning that the provision on “Dissemination of Terrorist Publications” could render liable any person who provides a service enabling others to access such material. “The whole range of mainstream and social media is indisputably in jeopardy,” Prof. Peiris said.
Former Minister Anura Priyadarshana Yapa and SLFP Chairman Nimal Siripala de Silva also addressed the media at the briefing.
by Saman Indrajith ✍️
News
SJB complains to bribery commission about alleged bid to interfere with evidence
SJB Gampaha District MP Harshana Rajakaruna has written to the Chairman of the Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption (CIABOC), Neil Iddawala, urging immediate action over attempts to interfere with evidence relating to a corruption complaint against Speaker Jagath Wickramaratne and his private secretary, Chameera Gallage.
In his letter, Rajakaruna refers to a complaint lodged on February 2, 2026, by Parliament’s suspended Deputy Secretary General Chaminda Kularatne under the Anti-Corruption Act No. 9 of 2023, naming the Speaker and his private secretary.
The Opposition MP has stated that Gallage subsequently wrote to the Secretary General of Parliament on 06 February, seeking a report on matters connected to the complaint. Rajakaruna alleges that Gallage’s letter amounts to an attempt to conceal or alter evidence and to influence potential witnesses.
News
Substandard Ondansetron: CIABOC launches probe
The Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption (CIABOC) has launched a probe into the distribution of substandard Ondansetron injections to state hospitals following the deaths of two patients who received the drug.
The stock of Ondansetron has been imported from an Indian pharmaceutical company and distributed to several hospitals, according to a complaint lodged with the CIABOC.
Two patients, one at the Kandy Hospital and another at the Mulleriyawa National Institute of Health Sciences, died after suffering adverse complications subsequent to the administration of the injection.
by Sujeewa Thathsara ✍️
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