Sri Lanka has
barred former central bank governor Ajith Nivard Cabraal and an ally of
former president Mahinda Rajapaksa from leaving the country due to
corruption complaints, officials said on Thursday.
Both Cabraal, central bank
chief for more than eight years, and Sajin De Vas Gunawardena, a
parliamentarian close to Rajapaksa, rejected allegations of misuse of
public funds under the previous Rajapaksa government.
Cabraal and Gunawardena said they had yet to be told of the travel ban.
"There
was a complaint from the bribery commission and we have imposed a
temporary travel suspension on them," Nihal Ranasinghe, the Controller
of Immigration and Emigration Department, told Reuters.
Another official from the anti-graft commission confirmed the travel ban.
Rajapaksa,
widely accused of corruption and nepotism during his rule, lost his bid
for a third term and the new government has started formal probes into
all the financial deals under his administration.
Sri
Lanka's Marxist Janatha Vimukthi Peremuna party last week complained to
anti-corruption body that both Cabraal and Gunawardena had misused
public funds.
It said Cabraal had
misused the funds by investing in Greek junk bonds in April 2011 and
lost millions of dollars in signing a wrong crude oil hedging contract
in 2007. Cabraal has rejected all allegations.
JVP accused Gunawardena of accumulating wealth by misusing public funds. He has also denied the allegations.
"I
have written a letter to the (bribery) commission seeking clarification
and to say that I am available to be present at the commission any
time," Gunawardena said.
"Anyway, I've no intention of leaving the county. If I had wanted, I'd have gone by now."
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