Oman Daily Observer

Lanka foreign minister quits amid scam probe

-

COLOMBO: Sri Lanka’s foreign minister resigned on Thursday over corruption charges in an investigat­ion of alleged irregulari­ties in government bond sales, maintainin­g that he was not guilty of wrongdoing.

The resignatio­n of Ravi Karunanaya­ke, a former finance minister, follows demands for his removal by both the government and the opposition, after the panel looking into the sales found his apartment rental was paid by an official being investigat­ed.

“I have never done anything wrong, and I resign with pride to create a new political culture in Sri Lanka and ensure good governance,” Karunanaya­ke told parliament in a statement after announcing his resignatio­n.

He said he would continue in the party as a backbench member of parliament, however.

“I have never earned any money from politics,” he said.

The allegation­s followed Karunanaya­ke’s appearance before the panel last week, and he has not been charged by any court.

President Maithripal­a Sirisena’s government has pledged to end the rampant corruption that affected the Indian Ocean island’s previous government.

Sirisena appointed a presidenti­al commission to investigat­e, following the demands of opposition lawmakers, who said the controvers­ial bond auction lost the state more than $1 billion, because of rising borrowing costs in the past two years.

The central bank has dismissed the opposition’s claims.

The auction, originally intended to sell 1 billion rupees ($7 million) of 30year bonds, eventually grew to more than 10 times that amount, to meet government borrowing needs.

More than half of the issue was sold to Perpetual Treasuries, a subsidiary of a company owned by the son-in-law of the former central bank governor, Arjuna Mahendran, in what has been criticised as a conflict of interest.

 ?? — AFP ?? Ravi Karunanaya­ke reacts after resigning in Colombo.
— AFP Ravi Karunanaya­ke reacts after resigning in Colombo.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Oman