Sri Lanka arrests son of former leader Rajapaksa

It is the second time he had been arrested


Reuters August 15, 2016
Namal Rajapaksa (C), son of former Sri Lanka's President Mahinda Rajapaksa, leaves with prison officers at court after being arrested in Colombo, Sri Lanka July 11, 2016. PHOTO: REUTERS

COLOMBO: Sri Lankan financial crime police arrested the eldest son of former president Mahinda Rajapaksa on Monday on suspicion of laundering money, his lawyer said, the latest legal difficulty for the once-powerful family.

Sri Lanka's new president, Maithripala Sirisena, faces pressure to act on allegations of corruption dating back to the Rajapaksa era, especially from civil society organisations who backed his successful bid to oust Rajapaksa last year.

The son, Namal Rajapaksa, who is also a member of parliament, had been questioned by officers from the Financial Crimes Investigations Division investigating some money he had invested in two companies, the lawyer said.

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"He was arrested by police under the anti-money laundering act. He will be produced before a court in a while," lawyer Premanath C Dolawatta said.

Neither Namal Rajapaksa nor family members were immediately available for comment but they have in the past all publicly denied wrongdoing.

It was the second time he had been arrested.

In July, he was arrested in connection with a separate case on suspicion of misappropriating of funds in a $650-million apartment project and was released on bail after seven days in detention on remand.

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Namal's uncle, the former president's brother, Basil Rajapaksa, who headed the economic development ministry, has also been arrested three times - twice over suspicion of misuse of anti-poverty funds and a once over suspicion of laundering money.

He too has denied any wrongdoing.

Since he took power in January 2015 after winning a presidential election, President Sirisena has launched a series of investigations into deals cleared by his predecessor and several members of his family.

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Rajapaksa was president for a decade until January 2015 and is now an opposition legislator.

He is popular among ethnic majority Sinhala Buddhists who credit him with ending a 26-year-war against ethnic minority Tamil separatist rebels in 2009.

He is trying to rally opposition to the government.

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