2 May, 2024

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A New Twist To Thajudeen’s Death

The Criminal Investigations Department (CID) has seized a vehicle belonging to a non-governmental organization involved in the alleged abduction of the slain national rugby player Wasim Thajudeen, according to Police sources.

Wasim Thajudeen

Wasim Thajudeen

This NGO is said to have handed over this vehicle to another NGO run by Shiranthi Rajapaksa. At the time of Thajudeen’s death the said vehicle had been in the possession of the NGO run by her.

Meanwhile adding a new twist to the Thajudeen killing, Cabinet Spokesperson Dr. Rajitha Senaratne on Thursday said that three officials attached to the Presidential Security Division (PSD) were
allegedly involved in the murder of Thajudeen. The courts on Thursday granted permission to exhume Thajudeen’s body. The exhumation will take place on August 10.

Meanwhile the son of former President Mahinda Rajapaksa and former UPFA Hambantota District MP Namal Rajapaksa has denied allegations that his family was involved in the murder of Thajudeen. He had told media that Thajudeen was a family friend while adding that some elements were trying to politicize Thajudeen’s death.

Thajudeen had died on May 17, 2012 inside his car which had apparently crashed into a wall close to Shalika grounds in Narahenpita. The Police at the time said that the car had exploded instantly. Later the charred body of the rugby player was found inside the car. The CID had recently informed courts that they were able to ascertain through a fresh investigation that Thajudeen’s death was not accidental but murder.

Meanwhile issuing a statement the Asian Human Rights Commission said; “one of the primary aims of political change in the country, therefore, has to be the restoration of its criminal justice apparatus – to the point that the relevant operators in these institutions will dare to perform their duty without fear of consequences and irrespective of whatever class, caste, ethnicity, and other considerations.”

We publish below the statement in full;

Exhumation of Wasim Thajudeen’s body may open an important page in criminal investigations

Next Monday, 10 August 2015, the body of the well-known rugby player and Havelock’s Captain, Wasim Thajudeen, will be exhumed on the orders of the Colombo Additional Magistrate. The Magistrate made this order on the basis of an application by the Criminal Investigations Division, which submitted reports stating that newly available evidence suggests that Thajudeen’s death was caused by murder. Three Judicial Medical Officers will conduct the examination of the exhumed body of Wasim Thajudeen.

The Asian Human Rights Commission (AHRC) understands that extensive investigations have been conducted into this case. The investigations have revealed extensive details about the manner in which this alleged murder has taken place, including details about the abduction; the injuries caused to Thajudeen, which led to his death; the manner in which a fabricated crime scene was constructed, to create the impression of death by accident; as well as details of the persons involved in the murder, including the masterminds.

The initiative taken by the Criminal Investigation Division to reinvestigate the alleged murder marks a new beginning in Sri Lanka, where, for several years, investigation into allegations of serious crimes including murder, enforced disappearances, abductions, and the like, have been hushed up, particularly when there is suspicion of politicians or their relatives being involved in such crimes.

There are long lists of such cover-ups; prominent cases include the daylight assassination of Lasantha Wickrematunge, the abduction and disappearance of Prageeth Ekneligoda, the assassination of former Tamil National Alliance Member of Parliament, Nadarajah Raviraj.

The AHRC also learned that some important breakthroughs have also been made into the abductions and the disappearance of Prageeth Eknaligoda and regarding the assassination of former TNA MP Raviraj.

For over two decades, the Asian Human Rights Commission, together with many other organisations, has warned that the administration of criminal justice has been seriously paralysed in Sri Lanka due to political reasons. The AHRC has also consistently warned that the political scheme unleashed by the 1978 Constitution and the paralysis of the criminal justice administration is linked. Furthermore, the AHRC has consistently communicated that the the paralysis of the criminal justice system will necessarily cause a breakdown of the legal system as a whole, which will, in turn, cause a serious societal crisis.

The initiative to exhume the body of Wasim Thajudeen, as well as developments in several cases brought to the courts by the Financial Crime Investigation Division of Sri Lanka Police, points to the administration of criminal justice in Sri Lanka heading in a positive direction. It is to be hoped that this trend will gather strength and that investigations into every crime will become the normal practice, as it should be in any country possessing the capacity to enforce the rule of law. Therefore, the AHRC cautiously, but at the same time hopefully, welcomes these initiatives and urges the entire society to support such initiatives.

What is often lost in discussions relating to the upcoming election is the fact that criminal investigations are matters that go beyond the interest of any particular election. In fact, the whole issue goes to the very core of the meaning of statehood. No state can survive if the state abandons its primary duty to protect its citizens from crimes. The capacity and the will to investigate crimes is a way by which the state manifests its capacity and the will to protect its own people.

Therefore, these criminal investigations should be looked upon not as matters of sectarian interest for or against any particular political party but as a matter of far greater importance than the outcome of an election. Whoever may win or lose an election is a matter of people’s choice, but that every government should protect the people through a viable and a genuinely functioning criminal justice system is matter of permanent interest.

January 8, 2015, has generally been viewed as a day that created the possibility of a shift away from the kind of politics envisaged through the executive presidential system created by the 1978 Constitution. Within that scheme, a government was allowed to function outside the limits of legality and, in fact, the very idea of the legal boundaries to power was altogether abandoned.

January 8 could, however, mark only the beginning of the possibility of a change of that catastrophic scheme. The realisation of this possibility is quite another matter. What the citizens have a right to hope for is that the daring initiatives being undertaken by the Criminal Investigation Division are an indication that such an actualisation is within people’s reach.

The criminal investigators who dare to take steps to uncover crimes that have been safely buried are taking enormous risks. In such moments of transition and risk, where entrenched habits of inaction are being broken, it is the duty of the citizenry to stand up to provide the moral support that duty conscious criminal investigators need. Under normal circumstances of a functioning democracy, a criminal investigation is a matter of routine. However, where such routine has been forgotten, the making of a new beginning is a difficult task. Therefore, those who are taking the initial steps in that direction should receive the encouragement and support of the citizenry as a whole, irrespective of whatever political opinions different sections of the society may hold.

Times when politicians can mockingly ask, “We are accused of crimes, but where is the proof?” are chilling times. When a criminal can say “prove if you can” and the relevant institutions fail to do so, the society faces one of the most frustrating moments in its collective psyche. When people become psychologically discouraged and lose their will to pursue justice for the crimes they have suffered, such a society reaches its lowest depths. And, such is the situation of the Sri Lankan society.

One of the primary aims of political change in the country, therefore, has to be the restoration of its criminal justice apparatus – to the point that the relevant operators in these institutions will dare to perform their duty without fear of consequences and irrespective of whatever class, caste, ethnicity, and other considerations.

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Latest comments

  • 6
    19

    This news report is wrong.

    Son used mother’s jeep to give a game to his PRAN.

    Remember who PRAN was ?

    Father was the village head. So, nothing goes wrong.

    • 22
      2

      Jim Nutty

      It appears you skipped your prescribed medications !

  • 21
    2

    Ahh the shameless arse licker of former Jarapassa regime aka Bum_softy. Why do u worry so mich about the criminal family? Did Jarapassa ever did anything to you?

    • 0
      6

      Yes yes, Lets only support the other criminal aka LTTE butty boy our beloved R.

      • 8
        0

        Why plain tea? Don’t have enough money to buy milk my son? Did you know that Jarawapassa is looking for someone to pluck his butt hair. Why don’t you go do that for your beloved Mahinda?

  • 5
    0

    January 8th and impending RW victory will hopefully open up a can of worms, atleast on the HR side.

  • 5
    0

    Is there any truth in the conjecture that Wasim was driving a Diesel car?
    If it is true, though, would the car have exploded upon impact with the wall?

    • 6
      0

      Can the impact explain all the alleged broken bones that are more likely from aggravated assault? We hope that the forensic analytical services in SL are up to par to confirm it.

  • 10
    0

    The murderous family of the dictator Mahendra Percy Jarapassa will have to sell the ‘Marriot Dubai’ to get out of the mess they are in. Even that is not going to be enough. Unfortunately, they can’t do that as it does belong to a unskilled Sri Lankan worker in Dubai. They can’t leave the country without a passport and there aren’t many genuine diplomats or individuals in responsible positions overseas either.
    MR must be thinking, ‘Oh boy, what a pile of s**t I got my self attached to?.
    ” Thanhaya Jayathee Sokho, Thanhaya Jayathee Bhayang”.

  • 3
    1

    Thajudeen was a family friend–Namal Rajapaksa.
    Yeah Namal….until one family member decided that all is fair in sxxxx and war? Do you also you want your papa to comeback just to keep the family skeletons in the cupboard because the rest of the country certainly does not need hoodlums wielding power again.

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