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President Mahinda Rajapaksa has obtained Cabinet approval for the release of former Army Commander General Sarath Fonseka according to Presidential spokesman Bandula Jayasekara.
Speculation was rife that Fonseka will be released tomorrow which also marks the Victory Day commemorating the third anniversary of the defeat of terrorism in the country.
A Reuter report quoting sources close to President said yesterday Rajapaksa will order the release of his ailing former army chief this week in a bid to quell criticism of the government and its human rights record.
Former General Sarath Fonseka, revered as a hero by many for helping end the 25-year civil war against the Tamil Tiger rebels, was detained in February 2010 after challenging Rajapaksa for president and was later stripped of his rank.
Fonseka leads the Democratic National Alliance, which has seven seats in a 225-member legislature, and some legislators from other opposition parties have said they are ready to back him due to his popularity and outspoken criticism against Rajapaksa.
He trailed Rajapaksa by 17 points in the last presidential election and with the next one not due until 2016, he is not seen as an immediate political threat. His health has also deteriorated in prison, increasing pressure on Rajapaksa to release him.
Economic woes pushing up the cost of living have dented the government's popularity ahead of local elections this year, and some analysts see Rajapaksa's decision to release his rival as a move to increase his party's chances by dividing the already bickering opposition.
Fonseka is being treated in hospital for respiratory problems stemming from a 2006 assassination attempt by a Tamil Tiger rebel suicide bomber.
His wife said she met Rajapaksa on Wednesday and he informed her of the pending release.
"The president said the general will be released unconditionally," Anoma Fonseka told Reuters. "The president told me that he will be releasing the general very soon and wanted the pending issues to be sorted out."
A government source said the president was most likely to make the announcement on or before Saturday when Sri Lanka holds a military parade to mark the 2009 defeat of the separatist Tamil Tiger rebels.
The United States has long called for the release of Fonseka, whom it calls a political prisoner. The timing of the planned release coincides with a visit by Sri Lanka's foreign minister to Washington, where he is due to meet Secretary of State Hillary Clinton on Friday.
Fonseka and the president's brother, Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa, led the army to victory in the final stages of the war, but they fell out after the war ended. The general complained he was sidelined by the president, who grew concerned Fonseka was plotting a coup.
The career infantry officer was prosecuted for an interview he gave to the Sunday Leader newspaper in December 2009 in which he said he was informed that Gotabaya Rajapaksa ordered troops to kill surrendering rebel leaders.
A U.S-backed resolution at the U.N. Human Rights Council last month urged Sri Lanka to investigate alleged abuses during the last months of the war.
Rights groups say both the former army chief and the president are implicated in shooting fighters as they sought to surrender. In recent months, rights workers and journalists have been targeted by a government media campaign against "traitors" it says helped the defeated guerrillas.