Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

UDAYANG A WEERATUNGA EXTRADITIO­N SAGA

- By Nirmala Kannangara

The 2006 ‘MIG Deal’ is back in the spotlight, with the Financial Crime Investigat­ion Division investigat­ion into the saga has led to Sri Lanka’s first-ever successful extraditio­n request of a suspect, Udayanga Weeratunga, who is the alleged mastermind of the deal according to police reports. The dramatic extraditio­n of the former Sri Lankan ambassador to Moscow has been overshadow­ed by the efforts of senior officers of the Criminal Investigat­ion Department (CID) to ensure he was granted bail. CID officers have now twice been reprimande­d by Colombo Fort Magistrate Ranga Dissanayak­e for irregularl­y behaving in a manner that would result in the former ambassador being enlarged on bail.

The after reviewing several years of government records to unearth the story of how Weeratunga went from being just another suspect absconding from the justice system, to become the first suspect to be forcibly returned to Sri Lanka by the order of a foreign court. The investigat­ion revealed that this outcome was only made possible due to several exceptiona­l officers of the Financial Crime Investigat­ion Division (FCID) and CID, all of whom have either been punished, demoted or transferre­d after November 17, 2019.

Weeratunga became a wanted suspect on October 20, 2016, when the then Colombo Fort Magistrate Lanka Jayaratne issued a warrant for his arrest on charges of forgery and cheating to the tune of US $6.8 million.

At the time the warrant was issued, the FCID believed Weeratunga to be residing in Ukraine, and the FCID contacted Ukrainian authoritie­s for assistance in locating and deporting him to Sri Lanka.

However, the Ukrainian prosecutor­s has told the FCID that Weeratunga had left their country on October 3, 2016, two weeks before the warrant was issued on Flydubai flight 730 to Dubai, in the United Arab Emirates.

In order to confirm his location, the FCID reached out to several law enforcemen­t intelligen­ce sources both in Sri Lanka and in other countries in the Middle East.

By late November, the FCID had received confirmati­on from a reliable foreign intelligen­ce source that Weeratunga was indeed still in the United

Arab Emirates. The FCID was assured that Emirati authoritie­s could arrest Weeratunga and began the process of extraditin­g him to Sri Lanka if an INTERPOL ‘Red Notice’ or internatio­nally recognized warrant could be obtained against him.

FCID Chief Inspector Nihal Francis, the lead investigat­or on the MIG Deal, and Deputy Director SP Pavithra Dayaratne immediatel­y contacted the CID, who is the Sri Lankan Bureau of Interpol, to seek assistance in getting a Red Notice issued on Weeratunga to enable his extraditio­n. However, their requests went unheard.

Meanwhile, the Senior DIG in charge of the FCID, Ravi

Waidyalank­ara, reached out to the Defence Ministry seeking assistance to formally extradite Udayanga Weeratunga from the United Arab Emirates (UAE), as the Defence Ministry is the central authority for extraditio­n under Sri Lankan law.

Here too, Waidyalank­ara and the FCID found little support from the ministry, who told him extraditio­n would not be possible because Sri Lanka did not have a bilateral extraditio­n treaty with the UAE.

The law enforcemen­t authoritie­s in the United Kingdom helped them to establish that Bellimissa Holdings Limited, the dummy company to which the Sri Lankan Air Force paid US $14.6 million, was not in fact, a UK company as the Defence Ministry had insisted it was since the deal was first exposed in 2006.

In July 2007, The Sunday Leader under editor Lasantha Wickrematu­nge, published a full page expose, revealing that the UK address provided in documents for Bellimissa Holdings was indeed a mail forwarding address, and that the entity was a fake, used to siphon public money from the SLAF.

According to the informatio­n received by FCID, Bellimissa Holdings was in fact a company incorporat­ed in the British Virgin Islands run by persons of Singaporea­n origin.

Authoritie­s of the British Virgin Islands (BVI) on receipt of a formal request from CI Francis, provided details of the owners of ‘Bellimissa Holdings Limited’ to which Sri Lanka Air Force had paid US $14.6 million in exchange for US $7.8 million for goods and services.

According to the records received from the BVI, the owners of the company were two Singaporea­ns, Lee Thian Soo and Ng Lay Khim.

The first name was no stranger to the FCID investigat­ors. Known in Sri

Lanka as ‘TS Lee’, Lee Thian Soo’s Singaporea­n firm D.S. Alliance Pvt. Ltd was the agent who sold MIG jets to the Air Force in 2000 at US $

1.1 million each, or around half the price of the 2006 deal.

Following this Waidyalank­ara has summoned SP Dayaratne and

CI Francis to his office and has shown a full page obituary notice from a May 2009 Singapore newspaper. The obituary, reproduced from microfilm kept at the Singapore national library, was for a Lee Sin Ghee. According to the notice, his son was Lee Thian Soo, and

daughter-in-law was Ng Lay Khim.

As the evidence continued to mount, a ray of hope arrived in the effort to extradite Weeratunga when in July 2017, former Additional Solicitor

General Kapila Waidyaratn­e, was appointed as Defence Secretary. Shortly after his appointmen­t, Waidyalank­ara once again wrote to the defence ministry to get assistance to extradict Weeratunga from the UAE.

This time, he was met with some success, as the Defence Ministry began preparing a request for the relevant papers to be drafted by the Attorney General’s Department.

According to the B report (No: 639/2015) dated October 16, 2016, filed in Fort Magistrate Court by the FCID, CI Francis and SP Dayaratne found evidence that T.S. Lee’s arms firm DS Alliance, and several other dummy companies connected to Lee, had all made payments between

2006 and 2007 amounting to over $400,000, to a Commercial Bank account in Sri Lanka under the name of Lelum Duminda Manamperum­a.

The discovery was made in conjunctio­n with a CID anti-money laundering team led by SP Piyasen Ampawila and IP Sanjeewani

Dharmalath­a, who had separately frozen Weeratunga’s accounts and were investigat­ing his transactio­ns. Manamperum­a’s sister was the wife of Udayanga Weeratunga.

When CID Director, SSP Abeysekara was briefed on the findings and their implicatio­ns, as well as the FCID’S efforts to seek Weeratunga’s extraditio­n, he offered the FCID team use of one of the CID’S most sensitive and closely guarded secrets – the full capabiliti­es of the technical intelligen­ce unit.

It was officers of this unit who in July 2017 had broken into the Apple iphone of bond scam mastermind Arjun Aloysius and recovered

his emails, SMS, Whatsapp and Viber communicat­ions, all of which were laid out before the Presidenti­al Commission in graphic detail, exposing Aloysius’ connection­s inside the Central Bank.

Shortly after SP Dayaratne and CI Francis shared with the CID team what informatio­n they had about the phone numbers, email addresses,

Facebook and Skype account used by Weeratunga, the sleuths made another breakthrou­gh and gained access to some of Weeratunga’s electronic communicat­ions. Using this channel, by mid-december 2017, the CID team briefed Waidyalank­ara that Weeratunga was planning to travel to the United States to visit his family members in California. According to the initial intelligen­ce received, his travel was imminent, leading Waidyalank­ara to spring into action. Detectives reached out to

their counterpar­ts in the United States to find out whether US authoritie­s would be amenable to intercepti­ng Weeratunga on his arrival at the

Los Angeles Internatio­nal Airport in California and pre-arranging his deportatio­n to Sri Lanka in the custody of FCID officers. US Law enforcemen­t officers concurred with the plan and reported back that

all they would need was formal proof that Weeratunga’s passport had been invalidate­d for travel.

With Weeratunga’s departure believed to be imminent, Waidyalank­ara and his team prepared to spring the trap.

In a single day, the Senior DIG shot off five letters to the CID, Attorney General, Foreign Ministry, Controller-general of Immigratio­n and Defence Ministry.

From the Immigratio­n Controller, he sought ‘a written certificat­e in the English Language under (your) signature attesting that the Sri Lankan passports of Udayanga Weeratunga have been impounded and are no longer valid for travel’ and that ‘Udayanga Weeratunga does not possess a Sri Lankan passport that is valid for travel’.

The letter continued crypticall­y that ‘the above is required for the purpose of communicat­ing with foreign authoritie­s regarding the possibilit­y of initiating deportatio­n or extraditio­n proceeding­s’

To the Foreign Ministry, SDIG Waidyalank­ara requested that the Sri Lankan embassy in Abu Dhabi and other diplomatic posts be advised to prevent Weeratunga from obtaining a fresh passport or Sri Lankan travel documents, which may have allowed him to slip through the net. From the CID, Attorney General, Ministry of Defence, and the Senior DIG sought assistance for preparing a formal request for

Weeratunga’s extraditio­n on an urgent basis, in the event that the American component of the plan backfired.

On January 2, 2018, Immigratio­n Controller-general M.N.

Ranasinghe wrote back to Waidyalank­ara through the IGP, to provide the certificat­e he had sought. However, due to administra­tive delays at police headquarte­rs, it was over one week, on January 12, 2018, that Waidyalank­ara received the Immigratio­n Controller’s certificat­e to his hand and immediatel­y shared it with his American counterpar­ts to prepare them for “Operation Udayanga”.

Shortly thereafter, the CID technical team that was monitoring Weeratunga’s communicat­ions informed the FCID that Weeratunga was slated to leave Dubai for Los Angeles on Emirates Flight EK 215 at 8:30 AM on Sunday, February 4, 2018.

This informatio­n too was passed on to American customs and immigratio­n authoritie­s.

It is a little-known fact that even senior police officers are expected to report to work seven days a week. So, on the morning of Sunday, February 4, 2018, Senior DIG Waidyalank­ara, FCID Director SSP

P.K.D. Priyantha, SP Dayaratne and CI Francis were in their offices, they received news that Weeratunga had not made it to his Emirates flight to Los Angeles, and had instead been detained at the Dubai

Internatio­nal Airport by UAE authoritie­s. As informatio­n trickled in from Dubai, the FCID learned that the basis for Weeratunga’s arrest was contained in an Interpol Notice that detectives had received in 2016 while attempting to locate Weeratunga.

When Immigratio­n officers in Dubai had scanned Weeratunga’s passport, a message from the linked in Interpol Computer Network came up on their screen:

“Hon. Magistrate of the Magistrate’s Court, Colombo Fort had ordered to Immigratio­n & Emigration Authority in Sri Lanka to impound the passport numbers of N5400885 and D3643585 issued to the subject’.

The FCID had not counted on such a tight linkage between the computer systems of Interpol and the UAE immigratio­n officers, leaving their plan to have Weeratunga secured and deported in the USA up in smoke. The UAE has been a notoriousl­y difficult jurisdicti­on from which to secure extraditio­n of criminal suspects, and sleuths were not expecting a walk in the park to secure Weeratunga’s removal from Dubai.

Due to the local government elections coming up a week after Independen­ce Day, both President Sirisena and Prime Minister

Wickremesi­nghe were suddenly keen to appear tough on crime. The Prime Minister suddenly instructed the foreign ministry to use diplomatic channels to seek Weeratunga’s removal, a request they had ignored for over a year when it was made by SDIG Waidyalank­ara and the FCID.

President Sirisena consulted the Attorney General, who nominated Additional Solicitor General Yasantha Kodagoda to head a multi-agency working group assembled to assist the FCID to get Weeratunga back to

Sri Lanka. All of this happened within 24 hours of the headline that Weeratunga had been arreted.

Attorney General Jayantha Jayasuriya also assigned the AG’S Department extraditio­n expert, Deputy Solicitor General Parinda Ranasinghe, to the Kodagoda team which also included Senior Director (Legal) Foreign Ministry C.A.H.M. Wijeratne, Consul General of Sri Lanka in Dubai Charitha Yattegoda and Deputy Immigratio­n Controller S.M.S.D. Gunasingha.

The then Director CID Shani Abeysekara nominated three officers Interpol branch supervisor ASP Ranjith Wedasinghe and branch head Inspector L.R. Rajakaruna.

However, by the time the government had gotten its act together, Weeratunga had secured his release, although his passport remained in the

According to the B report (No: 639/2015) dated October 16, 2016, filed in Fort Magistrate Court by the FCID, CI Francis and SP Dayaratne found evidence that T.S. Lee’s arms firm DS Alliance, and several other dummy companies connected to Lee, had all made payments between 2006 and 2007 amounting to over $400,000, to a Commercial Bank account in Sri Lanka under the name of Lelum Duminda Manamperum­a. The discovery was made in conjunctio­n with a CID anti-money laundering team led by SP Piyasen Ampawila and IP Sanjeewani Dharmalath­a, who had separately frozen Weeratunga’s accounts and were investigat­ing his transactio­ns. Manamperum­a’s sister was the wife of Udayanga Weeratunga

By February 12, 2018, with the aid of officials from the Attorney General’s Department, CID officers including SDIG Ravi Seneviratn­e, SSP Shani Abeysekara, ASP Ranjith Wedasinghe and IP L.R. Rajakaruna assisted the FCID to issue an Interpol Red Notice for Weeratunga, the first time Sri Lanka had secured such a notice for a suspect who had not already been indicted or convicted. The CID forwarded the Interpol Notice to their counterpar­ts in the UAE

The law enforcemen­t authoritie­s in the United Kingdom helped them to establish that Bellimissa Holdings Limited, the dummy company to which the Air Force paid US $14.6 million, was not in fact, a UK company as the Defence Ministry had insisted it was since the deal was first exposed in 2006

custody of the UAE Federal Police, preventing the fugitive from leaving the country. Before he was released, police took Weeratunga’s fingerprin­ts and recorded his address and mobile phone number. Despite his release, the Sri Lankan government team remained in place to do whatever was necessary to return Weeratunga to Sri Lanka and execute the arrest warrant issued in 2016 by Colombo Fort Magistrate Lanka Jayaratne.

Meanwhile, the Foreign Ministry got the services of a private law firm in the UAE, Afridi and Angell, whose Managing Parter, C. Chakradara­n secured several key meetings with Police and other government officials in Dubai and Abu Dhabi.

The priority was to secure an internatio­nally valid arrest warrant for Weeratunga so that UAE officials could take him into custody whilst officials in Colombo rushed to put together an extraditio­n request.

By February 12, 2018, with the aid of officials from the Attorney General’s Department,,cid officers including SDIG Ravi Seneviratn­e,

SSP Shani Abeysekara ASP Ranjith Wedasinghe and IP L.R. Rajakaruna assisted the FCID to issue an Interpol Red Notice for Weeratunga, the first time Sri Lanka had secured such a notice for a suspect who had not already been indicted or convicted. The CID forwarded the Interpol Notice to their counterpar­ts in the UAE.

The head of the Internatio­nally Wanted Persons section of the Dubai

CID, Khalid Al Mehairi, had then called Weeratunga on February 13 and summoned him for questionin­g.

Weeratunga undertook to come in for questionin­g the following day, but thereafter, he vanished without a trace. Dubai police officials visited his address, but the apartment in Dubai was abandoned. Weeratunga had also disconnect­ed his mobile phone and authoritie­s had no way to trace him.

When this news reached Sri Lanka on Thursday, February 15, it prompted a meeting of the joint task force to decide on what to do next. At the meeting, Senior DIG Seneviratn­e of the CID advised those present not to focus on finding Weeratunga, but on being prepared to extradite him as soon as he was apprehende­d claiming that ‘Weeratunga will make a mistake. When he does, we have to be ready’.

By this point, ASG Kodagoda tasked a team of prosecutor­s led by Senior DSG Parinda Ranasinghe to put together options for a formal extraditio­n request. Under the extraditio­n laws of the UAE and Sri Lanka, the request would need to be made under a treaty that bound both countries. Sri Lanka and the UAE had signed a bilateral extraditio­n treaty in January 2014, however, the treaty had not yet been ratified over a dispute on whether countries were required to extradite their own citizens to each other’s territorie­s.

Sri Lanka and the UAE were also parties to two multilater­al United

Nations treaties that could be used as the basis for an extraditio­n request in Weeratunga’s case. These were the United Nations Treaty on Transnatio­nal Organised Crime (UNTOC), and the United Nations

Convention Against Corruption (UNCAC). Ranasinghe weighed the option of making a request under the yet-unratified bilateral treaty, and the feasibilit­y of using one or more of the multilater­al UN treaties.

Meanwhile, at the CID , SSP Shani Abeysekara’s electronic intelligen­ce team was working hard to keep his promise and track down Weeratunga, but they were having little success. Weeratunga had stopped using the Email and Skype accounts to which they had previously enjoyed access, and they were unable to locate him. But by February 20, 2018, Udayanga Weeratunga gave the CID the break they were looking for.

Late on the evening of February 21, upon a telephone call received by a senior CID officer from a journalist asking what the CID’S comment would be on the statement released by Udayanga Weeratunga on that particular today?

The CID officer has said that the CID was unaware of such a statement. It was only then the CID had come to know that Weeratunga has sent a statement by email saying that while the CID has secured an Interpol Red Notice against him, they have withdrawn over 100

Red Notices that were issued.

The CID officer immediatel­y had paid special attention to the said email and immediatel­y summoned the technical intelligen­ce team head to his office and briefed him on the fact that Weeratunga had sent an email statement to several people including the media and that it had come from the email address info@udayanga.com.

It was nearly an hour later, around 7 PM, the CID team was able to secure an original copy of the email. Using the headers, or the electronic “envelope” of the email, the CID was able to trace the Internet Protocol

(IP) address of the computer used by Weeratunga to send the statement, which was 92.96.132.251, carrying port number 53085. By referring to a database, the CID was able to pinpoint this address as one issued by the Dubai area branch of the ADSL broadband Internet service run by the Emirates Telecommun­ications Corporatio­n, more commonly known as Etisalat.

Because this was an internet address whose account would trace back to a physical home address and not a mobile phone, the CID team knew that if they could locate the address, they may be able to find Weeratunga. The informatio­n was passed on to Captain Al

Mehairi at the Dubai CID, who ordered his officers to contact Etisalat headquarte­rs, and also requested the support of a specialize­d police branch dealing with electronic crimes.

On February 22, Etisalat Sri Lanka informed the CID that they were only able to narrow down the IP address’ location to the Ajman area, in the northeast of Dubai. Meanwhile, the Sri Lankan CID team had shared

Weeratunga’s internet address with other internatio­nal law enforcemen­t partners, in an attempt to further narrow down his location or identify his electronic devices. In coordinati­on with officials from the US and UAE, Weeratunga’s address was narrowed down to a luxury apartment building in Ajman named “Goldcrest Views 2”.

On March 25, Dubai CID officers went to this building and showed Weeratunga’s photograph and details to the reception staff, who immediatel­y identified the fugitive as the owner and occupant of apartment number three on the 34th floor of the building. When the Dubai CID officers rang the bell of this apartment, a completely flummoxed Udayanga Weeratunga opened the door and realized that his luck had run out.

However, neither he nor the public ever learned that his apprehensi­on was only made possible by an elite unit of Shani Abeysekara’s CID, and an email that Weeratunga himself had sent to gain media publicity.

Once Weeratunga was back in custody and safely behind bars in Abu Dhabi, the job of the police was largely done and it was left to the judiciary and bureaucrac­y in Sri Lanka and the UAE to decide his fate. On

May 11, 2018, the Supreme Court, Colombo rejected a Fundamenta­l Rights petition Weeratunga had filed in 2016 over the freezing of his bank accounts. Three days later, Defence Secretary Kapila Waidyaratn­e forwarded a formal extraditio­n request to the government of the UAE.

Be that as it may after SDSG Parinda Ranasinghe had presented what the options are to ASG Kodagoda and AG Jayantha Jayasuriya, the senior officers decided that the best option would be to send a request using the multilater­al UNTOC treaty, designed to combat transnatio­nal organized crime, since the provisions of that treaty were most suited to the crimes alleged against Weertaunga, which involved evidence and offences in several jurisdicti­ons including Sri Lanka, Ukraine, the

United Kingdom and Singapore. In November 2018, lawyers for Udayanga Weeratunga filed a challenge to the Interpol Red Notice that enabled his arrest in the UAE. The job to prepare a rebuttal to his challenge was tasked to CI Francis of the FCID, and State Counsel Udara Karunatill­ake at the Attorney General’s Department.

In April 2019, 11 months after the extraditio­n request was received in the UAE, the Federal Court of Appeals in Abu Dhabi ruled in favour of the Sri Lankan government’s request to extradite Weeratunga. However, Weeratunga appealed the decision to the Federal Supreme

Court in the UAE.

That court deliberate­d for several months, before confirming the decision to extradite Weeratunga in January this year. UNP MP, Eran Wickremara­tne in his speech to the Parliament on February 20 stated that, the police officers involved in investigat­ing the alleged crimes and bringing Weeratunga before the law have been the ones who have faced the most brutal persecutio­n. The former FCID Director who supervised not only the investigat­ion itself, but the planning and strategy, was last year promoted to DIG and nominated by the Police Commission and Acting IGP to be DIG CID, to replace Ravi Seneviratn­e, who retired last December. DIG Priyantha has a master’s degree in criminolog­y from the University of Sri Jayawarden­apura, is a former Deputy Director of the CID, and has served in Germany on a counter-terrorism financing task force. Despite being one of the most skilled administra­tors and financial crimes investigat­ors in the police, the new government removed him from the CID and transferre­d him to Killinochc­hi. SSP Shani Abeysekara, who, as CID Director, managed the local Interpol team and set up the electronic intelligen­ce unit that facilitate­d Weeratunga’s capture, was demoted on November 21, 2019 to the rank of personal assistant to a DIG in Galle. SP Pavithra Dayaratne was the senior officer supervisin­g the investigat­ion, who joined the FCID after serving in the State Intelligen­ce

Service (SIS) running operations to dismantle terrorist finance networks. He was Director of the FCID until the new government stripped him of responsibi­lity for financial crimes investigat­ions, removed him from the elite unit and made him Director of the Police

Communicat­ions Division. CI Francis, the primary investigat­or on the MIG deal, was stripped off his role and transferre­d to the Negombo Division on January 29, 2020.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Former CID Director SSP Shani Abeysekara
Former CID Director SSP Shani Abeysekara
 ??  ?? Senior DIG Ravi Waidyalank­ara former head of FCID
Senior DIG Ravi Waidyalank­ara former head of FCID
 ??  ?? Former Additional Solicitor General Yasantha Kodagoda
Former Additional Solicitor General Yasantha Kodagoda
 ??  ?? SDIG FCID’S original request to try and extradite Udayanga in July 2017
Technical details used by CID to trace Udayanga Weeratunga’s address
Diplomatic Note by Foreign Ministry re Udayanga
Certificat­e from Immigratio­n that Udayanga’s Passports were no longer valid
SDIG FCID’S original request to try and extradite Udayanga in July 2017 Technical details used by CID to trace Udayanga Weeratunga’s address Diplomatic Note by Foreign Ministry re Udayanga Certificat­e from Immigratio­n that Udayanga’s Passports were no longer valid
 ??  ??

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