Ex-ministers Mahindananda and Fernando jailed up to 25 years for corruption

COLOMBO – The Colombo High Court on Thursday (29) sentenced two former ministers from the government of deposed president Gotabaya Rajapaksa to decades in prison in a landmark corruption case.
Ex-sports minister Mahindananda Aluthgamage and former trade minister Nalin Fernando were found guilty by the Colombo High Court of misappropriating 53 million rupees ($177,000) of state funds.
The pair were also fined $2,000 for using government money to donate board games – including 14,000 carrom boards and 11,000 draughts sets through Lanka Sathosa, a state-owned enterprise – to boost the failed 2015 re-election bid of Gotabaya’s elder brother, Mahinda Rajapaksa.
The sports equipment was distributed to sports clubs across the country between September and December 2014, a period leading up to the national polls.
Aluthgamage was sentenced to 20 years in jail. Fernando, the then-Chairman of Lanka Sathosa and a former trade minister, was sentenced to 25 years.
Aluthgamage is now the most senior member of a Rajapaksa-led cabinet to be successfully prosecuted for corruption.
The cases against both men were initiated six years ago, when the Rajapaksa brothers were out of power, but the case had been making slow headway until a new government took office last year.
In court, the prosecution argued that the accused had “abused the powers of their official positions and committed wrongful acts for political gain”, thereby causing significant harm to public funds and undermining democratic integrity. The Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery or Corruption (CIABOC) filed the case in 2019 at the Permanent High Court Trial-at-Bar, which was specially constituted to hear serious corruption cases, urged the court to deliver a judgment that would serve as a deterrent to those considering similar abuses of power, while reaffirming the importance of transparency and accountability in public service.
Aluthgamage also faces a separate investigation into allegations that he authorized in 2022 a payment of $6.09 million to a Chinese supplier for a fertilizer shipment that was never delivered.
He caused a stir in 2020 when he accused Sri Lanka’s national cricket team of rigging the 2011 World Cup final in favour of India, triggering an investigation that ultimately failed to substantiate his claims.
Aluthgamage, who served as sports minister from 2010 to 2015, said in June 2020 that he had “not wanted to disclose” the alleged match-fixing plot at the time.
“In 2011, we were supposed to win, but we sold the match. I feel I can talk about it now. I am not implicating players, but certain sections were involved,” he said.
Sri Lanka lost the final at Mumbai’s Wankhede Stadium by six wickets. Both Indian and Sri Lankan players have strongly denied any wrongdoing.
-AFP/ENCL
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