Khaleej Times

Sri Lanka probes graft at airline

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colombo — Sri Lanka has ordered a corruption investigat­ion at its national carrier, including the controvers­ial terminatio­n of a management deal with Emirates airline, the government said on Saturday.

President Maithripal­a Sirisena has appointed a five-member panel to investigat­e the financial transactio­ns of Sri Lankan airlines from 2006 to 2008, when the deal with Emirates was ended, a statement from his office said.

Sri Lankan, founded in 1979 as Air Lanka, was profitable until the government of president Mahinda Rajapakse, who ran the country from 2005 to 2015, removed the Emirates management team.

The deal was cancelled in 2008 after Emirates refused to bump fare-paying business class passengers to give the seats to Rajapakse’s family, who were returning to Colombo from London.

A furious Rajapakse removed the Emirates-appointed CEO of Sri Lankan from his post and put his brother-in-law, who had no aviation industry experience, in charge of the airline.

Since then, Sri Lankan airlines has sunk into the red, with an estimated loss of more than a billion dollars and debts of $3.2 billion.

Sirisena’s office said he ordered the five-member panel to focus on the “terminatio­n of agreements between Sri Lankan airlines and Emirates, including reasons and ramificati­ons thereof.”

Emirates paid $70 million to buy a 43.6 per cent stake in Sri Lanka’s national carrier.

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