Khaleej Times

Sri Lanka police chief slammed over meditation rage video

-

colombo — A video showing Sri Lanka’s top police officer angrily assaulting an employee who refused to participat­e in compulsory morning meditation sessions has ignited a firestorm of controvers­y in the Buddhist-majority nation.

In leaked CCTV footage, Inspector-General Pujith Jayasundar­a can be seen shaking a lift operator by the collar and making threatenin­g gestures after the man failed to join the meditation session at police headquarte­rs.

Jayasundar­a, who has claimed prayer and Buddhist rituals helped elevate him to the top police job, raised eyebrows in February when he made daily meditation mandatory for the 85,000 officers and staff under his command.

Government spokesman Rajitha Senaratne said the incident risked further embarrassi­ng Sri Lanka’s police force, whose reputation has already been tarnished over allegation­s of abuses during the longrunnin­g civil war and thereafter. “If our police chief is behaving like this, then we will have to accept when internatio­nal organisati­ons accuse our police of routinely using torture on suspects,” Senaratne said.

“There are serious questions about issuing such instructio­ns in a multi-cultural, multi-religious society like ours.” He declined say whether the police chief had himself attended the morning meditation session prior to the assault.

Jayasundar­a is no stranger to controvers­ial outbursts, having been put on notice after publicly declaring he could “bend the law without breaking it”, government sources said. Police spokesman Ruwan Gunasekera said no internal disciplina­ry action was being taken against Jayasundar­a, but an investigat­ion was under way into how the footage was leaked. —

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Arab Emirates