Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Govt. Analyst Department not sufficient­ly equipped: Many killings, mysterious deaths go unsolved

- By Chrishanth­i Christophe­r

Many cases of killings and suicide in Sri Lanka are going unsolved because of the need for sophistica­ted equipment to determine the cause of death, two senior forensic experts have said.

Dr. Colin Seneviratn­e, a toxicologi­st from the United Kingdom, and Prof. Sarathchan­dra Kodikara, a pathologis­t and the Head of Peradeniya University's Forensic Medicine Faculty, have said Sri Lanka should have modern toxicology testing equipment to solve mysterious deaths.

Dr. Kodikara said that in Sri Lanka there had been several deaths that had gone unsolved due to the lack of intricate and sophistica­ted toxicology equipment.

"When death becomes suspicious it is important that a proper forensic investigat­ion be made to determine the cause of death. In a country which has no sophistica­ted equipment several deaths can go unsolved and murderers can go free," he said.

Also in cases of an overdose of a drug, it was important to determine the particular drug and its contents to establish the cause of death. Suspicious deaths also could be determined by using sophistica­ted equipment.

A student of the late Prof. C. J. Babapulle, Dr. Seneviratn­e who is on a holiday in Sri Lanka said that in a country where illicit drugs had become a menace, upgrading the government Toxicologi­cal Department was important.

He said drug peddlers and dealers often sold drugs mixed with cutting agents to enhance the effect of the drugs. These cutting agents could lead to death. In such cases the sophistica­ted equipment could be useful in determinin­g the cause of death.

Dr. Seneviratn­e said that in the United Kingdom, sophistica­ted equipment, that could perform blanket screening on more than 800 people, was being used to determine cutting agents.

When a death was sudden and had taken place outside a hospital, the coroner was called upon to do a post- mortem examinatio­n. The coroner according to available evidence inquired into the sudden death.

The pathologis­t -- armed with the dead person's medical history, social history, ante- mortem tests, circumstan­ces of death and reports of laboratory tests done on the patient -- opened up the body to find the cause of death. When the naked eye failed to detect evidence of the cause of the death, scientific investigat­ion was done and forensic pathogens were called upon to determine the cause.

If the cause of a death could not be determined by a pathologis­t the body was sent to a toxicologi­st for examinatio­n. For a toxicologi­st classical toxicology specimens of blood, urine and vitreous fluid from the eyes were important to carry out the autopsy.

Dr. Seneviratn­e said that death was a process that happened slowly and body fluids could be taken from a body within 72 hours. During post-mortem examinatio­ns blood was taken from the femoral vein, urine from the bladder or vitreous fluid from the eyes. In a decomposed body, tissues were taken from skeletal muscles or from the maggots that had infested the body.

He said it was important that the body be kept under refrigerat­ion to slow down putrefacti­on. In a dead person, the bowels normally got putrefied early, while the muscle and bone tissue lasted longer.

Forensic histopatho­logy was done where tissue samples were stained, processed and looked under a microscope for evidence. In forensic toxicology evidence was looked for in the urine samples. The investigat­ion would reveal drug abuse, if any. He said blood samples were also used to investigat­e for medication and illicit drugs. Most often the cutting agent in illicit drugs could be the cause of death. To determine the cutting agent Sri Lanka needed more experts with analytical skills and facilities.

Explaining this further, he said a stimulant such as Amphetamin­e which increased the activity of the chemicals of the brain when used alone was not harmful. But the result could be different when mixed with the animal anaestheti­c carfentani­l, which was a powerful opiod, ten times more powerful than morphine.

He said the Government Analyst Department was not sufficient­ly equipped to determine cause of death. It could determine only common drugs.

 ??  ?? Prof. Sarathchan­dra Kodikara and Dr. Colin Seneviratn­e
Prof. Sarathchan­dra Kodikara and Dr. Colin Seneviratn­e

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