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Transparency International Sri Lanka (TISL), in a statement has once again drawn the attention of the general public to the serious concerns that were brought to light by the Pandora Papers and revealed to the public earlier this month.
The Pandora Papers exposé provides clear evidence of how the offshore industry promotes corrup-tion and demonstrates the importance of ensuring the transparency of beneficial ownership of enti-ties. On Sri Lanka, particularly, the Papers refer to extensive assets held offshore by former Deputy Minister of Water Supply and Drainage Nirupama Rajapaksa and her husband, Thirukumar Nadesan.
TISL in its initial statement, following the revelations, called on the Sri Lankan authorities to ensure that independent investigations are carried out expeditiously into the revelations made by the Pandora Papers. Since then, the President has called on the Commission to Investigate Allegations of Bribery and Corruption (CIABOC) to investigate the claims made by Pandora Papers.
As an organisation that continues to raise awareness of the damaging effects of corruption, TISL said it has taken several steps since the initial statement, pertaining to the revelations made by the Pandora Papers.
On 7 October, TISL filed a complaint with CIABOC, calling for an investigation into the alleged unex-plained assets of the former Deputy Minister and her husband, who have been identified as Politically Exposed Persons (PEP). TISL noted that the transactions revealed through this exposé could amount to offences under Section 23A of the Bribery Act, Section 4(1) of the CIABOC Act, and relevant provi-sions of the Declaration of Assets and Liabilities Law, and requested the Commission to probe into the Declarations of Assets and Liabilities of Nirupama Rajapaksa relating to her tenure as a Member of Par-liament. TISL requested CIABOC to investigate whether public funds have been embezzled and laun-dered to these foreign safe heavens.
TISL also wrote to the Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU) of the Central Bank of Sri Lanka on 13 October, calling on them to coordinate with relevant law enforcement authorities at both local and international levels to investigate potential money laundering allegedly committed by the former Member of Par-liament and her spouse. The FIU, as the central independent body established in terms of the provi-sions of the Financial Transactions Reporting Act No. 06 of 2006 (FTRA), is empowered to facilitate the prevention, detection, investigation and prosecution of offences related to money laundering and ter-rorist financing.
Through the letter TISL requested the FIU to take further steps to furnish the authorities with evi-dence, examining the financial transactions that have flowed in and out of Sri Lanka by coordinating with local and foreign financial institutions, connected to these two individuals.
TISL has also filed three Right to Information Requests to the Elections Commission, Parliament and the Presidential Secretariat, calling for the Declarations of Assets and Liabilities of Nirupama Rajapaksa as an election candidate, Member of Parliament and Deputy Minister, respectively
The Declaration of Assets and Liabilities Law No. 1 of 1975 makes it mandatory for Parliamentarians and senior public officials to annually submit a declaration of assets and liabilities, which includes the assets and liabilities of their spouse and dependent children. If the former Parliamentarian has not disclosed the overseas assets revealed through Pandora Papers, she will be in breach of the Declaration of As-sets and Liabilities Law. Therefore, her asset declarations would be a key tool to identify whether the overseas assets of the Deputy Minister, her spouse and children revealed through Pandora Papers have been disclosed at the time.
TISL Executive Director Nadishani Perera, commenting on the matter, stated: “We urge the relevant authorities in the country to take immediate action to independently investigate the revelations made by Pandora Papers. It is important that the due process is followed without any interference, obstruc-tions or delays. For the PEPs implicated, there remains a path to clearing their name, if they were to heed the call of the public by making the relevant asset declarations public. A thorough and impartial investigation will also bolster faith in the law enforcement agencies of the country and prove to be an important deterrent against perpetrators of white-collar crimes.”
The TISL Executive Director also noted that “while it is important to take stringent action to prevent foreign currency unlawfully flowing out of the country into secrecy jurisdictions, it is also imperative that countries like Sri Lanka take this issue up on a diplomatic level in order to ensure financial institu-tions in countries such as Singapore are also held accountable and that steps are taken to recover any proceeds of crime back to our country from these asset destinations”.