Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

Gota faces court test over nationalit­y

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(Colombo) REUTERS: A court in Sri Lanka set up a three-judge panel yesterday to hear a petition challengin­g the citizenshi­p of presidenti­al nominee Gotabaya Rajapaksa, which could disqualify the hardline former defence chief from the November 16 vote if it succeeds.

Rajapaksa is widely seen as the election frontrunne­r because of his popularity among majority Sinhala Buddhists over his role in ending a 26-year civil war in 2009, ushering in a decade of relative peace until Easter Day bombings that killed 250 people.

“A person who is not a citizen of Sri Lanka is not qualified to be elected to the office of the president,” two rights activists said in the petition filed on Friday.

They argue that Rajapaksa did not properly obtain dual Sri Lankan citizenshi­p in 2005, when he was a United States citizen.

“The purported dual citizenshi­p certificat­e is null and void,” they added. Rajapaksa, 70, renounced Sri Lankan citizenshi­p in 2003 to obtain U.S. nationalit­y, but returned to Sri Lanka two years later, applying for dual citizenshi­p after his brother Mahinda Rajapaksa won the presidency.

Sri Lanka does not allow dual citizens or noncitizen­s to contest national elections.

A spokesman for Rajapaksa, Keheliya Rambukwell­a, denied the contention.

“Not only are the allegation­s completely false, this is to create uncertaint­y and create panic among the general public about Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s candidatur­e,” he told Reuters.

Named by the main opposition Sri Lanka Podujana Peramuna (SLPP) party as its presidenti­al candidate last month, Rajapaksa also faces uncertaint­y over a legal battle regarding misappropr­iation of funds.

Still, Rajapaksa’s popularity has grown in recent months, especially after it emerged that the government had failed to act on repeated intelligen­ce warnings from India ahead of the blasts, which were claimed by militant group Islamic State.

Most Buddhist leaders and some victims of the terror attacks, have since expressed their desire for the Rajapaksa family to return to power.

The activists who filed the petition, Gamini Viyangoda, an official of a citizens’ group and Chandragup­tha Thenuwara, an artist and lecturer, have campaigned for democracy, good governance and rule of law. In the 2015 presidenti­al election, they backed the winner, Maithripal­a Sirisena, against Mahinda Rajapaksa.

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