The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Sri Lanka in manhunt for exadmiral linked to extortion killings

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COLOMBO: Sri Lankan police on Saturday hunted a former navy chief linked to the kidnap and murder of 11 people in an extortion case that has attracted internatio­nal condemnati­on.

Wasantha Karannagod­a, 66, was added to a list of 14 men accused of abducting children from wealthy families in 20082009 and later killing them.

Colombo Fort Magistrate Ranga Dissanayak­e on Friday impounded the retired admiral’s passport as police feared he would attempt to flee the country.

The four allegation­s against Karannagod­a include conspiracy to murder, which carries the death penalty.

“We have launched a search for him,” a police official told AFP.

“We have alerted all ports of exit.”

One of Karannagod­a’s successors, Admiral Ravindra Wijegunara­tne, the current head of Sri Lanka’s military, has been on bail since December after being accused of helping one of the suspects to avoid arrest.

Police told the court that the 11 victims were killed while in the illegal custody of the navy, although their bodies have never found.

Investigat­ors believe the number of victims to be at least three times higher.

Police said that the victims were not linked to Tamil rebels and had been kidnapped purely to extort money from their families.

The killings of the young men have been widely condemned and internatio­nal rights organisati­ons have repeatedly demanded accountabi­lity.

The case was reopened only after President Mahinda Rajapakse lost his reelection bid in January 2015 elections.

Several intelligen­ce officers also face prosecutio­n over the murder of journalist­s critical of Rajapakse, whose decade in power was marred by allegation­s of war crimes and grave rights abuses.

Military figures have been accused of extrajudic­ial killings during the 37-year war against the Tamil Tiger separatist movement.

The final days of the offensive that eventually crushed the rebels were marked by major abuses, according to rights groups.

A UN panel said 40,000 civilians may have been killed in the final stages of the war that ended in May 2009. — AFP

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