Sri Lanka may 'take action' over opposition candidate
Sri Lanka is considering taking action against defeated presidential candidate Sarath Fonseka, the defence secretary has told the BBC.
Gotabaya Rajapaksa - the brother of President Mahinda Rajapaksa - said that Gen Fonseka had allegedly divulged sensitive information to the public.
His comments came just a day after the president was re-elected.
Gen Fonseka has rejected the result and told the BBC that he wants to leave the country because of death threats.
"The government has informed the airport not to allow me to leave the country," he told the BBC Sinhala service. "I fear that an assassination attempt may be made against me."
'Many mistakes'
The defence secretary told the BBC's Anbarasan Ethirajan in Colombo that he was angry with Gen Fonseka for making false allegations against him in public.
Mr Rajapaksa said that Gen Fonseka was wrong to suggest in a newspaper interview that he had ordered the killings of three senior Tamil Tiger rebels as they tried to surrender in the final stages of the conflict last May.
Gen Fonseka later retracted his statement and said his words were taken out of context.
But in his BBC interview, Mr Rajapaksa said the retraction was not enough.
"He accused me of saying that I gave wrong orders. It came out in the newspapers. So we will follow legal procedures. If he has violated certain laws then we will take action.
"He had done many mistakes, remember. He was a member of the security council. He only left three months ago. He divulged certain security information to the public. He did a wrong thing there.
"But we will not arrest him because he was the opposition candidate."
There has been no immediate response from Gen Fonseka to Mr Rajapaksa's comments.
'Free of threats'
In a separate development, Mr Rajapaksa announced that the man believed to be second-in-command of the Tamil Tigers' overseas operations had been arrested.
Sarath Fonseka |
He said the suspect, known as Rajan (alias Subramaniam Sivakumar) "had been arrested in a South-East Asian nation" and brought to Colombo on Thursday.
He said that the information regarding the suspect came from Tamil Tiger leader Kumaran Pathmanathan, who is currently being held in Colombo.
Mr Pathmanathan was arrested last August.
Earlier, President Rajapaksa said that his clear victory in Tuesday's presidential elections had answered his critics.
The president won six million votes compared to the four million cast for Gen Fonseka.
"The people of Sri Lanka, democratically and very clearly, have shown that they are now free of threats, free of fear, free of terrorism - and they have shown they support the measures which have freed them."
Mr Rajapaksa told reporters that he would start by focusing on the economic development of the country.
He also promised to focus on the concerns of Sri Lanka's Tamil minority and to discuss devolution of power - a subject his opponents have accused him of failing to address.
"From today onward, I am the president of everyone, whether they voted for me or not."
Analysts had predicted a closely fought contest between the two architects of the government's victory over the Tamil Tiger rebels last year.
But in the end President Rajapaksa won the vote comfortably - capturing 57% of the vote in Tuesday's polling, while Sarath Fonseka won 40%, according to the election commission.
The independent Centre for Monitoring Election Violence said that while there were reports of irregularities, there was no evidence to suggest large-scale fraud.
Some 70% of Sri Lanka's 14 million-strong electorate turned out to vote. However, turnout in the Tamil areas in the north-east, where the fiercest fighting occurred during the conflict, was less than 30%. - courtesy: BBC -
2 Comments
The country has given Approvaal of all the policies followed by the Hon, President, Mahinda Rajapakse. The scale of his victory is of a scale unprecedented in the History of Sri Lanka.
At the same time, it is sad to note that the population of the North and the East has not come out of their shell shock, and voter turn out has been in low thirties in comparison to 70 % in established democratic areas.
BBC I hope will throw more light on the bomb explosion, one directed at a UPFA -governing party office. I wonder whether there were thets against voting.
I for one, am fully confident that the new President can build many bridges joining the communities too, in addition to the massive infrastructure projects in progress.
Mahinda is the only one to spend time to learn and speak Tamil and I earnt that Tamil language skill is to be made compulsory to all public employees soon.
Anyone is free to take legal action in a democratic country. The problem arises when there are threats and intimidation as well as misuse of state power and the emergency laws to crush opposition and dissent. The defence secretary is well known for this. We are yet to see the killers of Lasantha Wickrematunge and other media personnel brought to justice. Also the killing of political activists such as Raviraj.
The justice system is there to protect helpless individuals. Instead we see it being used by powerful figures in the government to harass those who do not conform with their line of thinking.