COLOMBO: Sri Lanka’s former president Ranil Wickremesinghe was arrested on Friday for allegedly “misusing government funds,” a senior police detective said.
Wickremesinghe was taken into custody after being questioned about a September 2023 visit to London to attend a ceremony for his wife at a British university while he was head of state, the officer said.
“We are producing him before the Colombo Fort magistrate,” the officer said, adding that they were pressing charges for using state resources for personal purposes.
Wickremesinghe had stopped in London in 2023 on his way back from Havana, where he attended a G77 summit.
He and his wife, Maithree, attended a University of Wolverhampton ceremony.
Wickremesinghe had maintained that his wife’s travel expenses were met by her and that no state funds were used.
However, the Criminal Investigation Department of the police alleged that Wickremesinghe used government money for his travel on a private visit and that his bodyguards were also paid by the state.
Wickremesinghe became president in July 2022 for the remainder of Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s term, after Rajapaksa stepped down following months of protests over alleged corruption and mismanagement.
Wickremesinghe is credited with stabilizing the economy after the country’s worst-ever financial meltdown in 2022.
He lost his re-election bid in September.
Sri Lanka’s former president Ranil Wickremesinghe arrested
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Sri Lanka’s former president Ranil Wickremesinghe arrested
- Wickremesinghe was taken into custody after being questioned about a September 2023 visit to London to attend a ceremony for his wife
- Wickremesinghe is credited with stabilizing the economy after the country’s worst-ever financial meltdown in 2022
Fire at Cape Town airport disrupts international flights
- Images shared online showed travelers evacuating South Africa’s second-busiest airport
- The fire occurred just days after the announcement of a major phased infrastructure upgrade project at the airport
CAPE TOWN: A fire broke out at Cape Town International Airport Tuesday, prompting passenger evacuations and disrupting international flights to and from South Africa’s popular tourist city before being brought under control.
Images shared online showed travelers evacuating South Africa’s second-busiest airport with suitcases as smoke filled the terminal and sirens rang to alert passengers of an emergency evacuation.
“Cape Town International Airport confirms that a fire occurred on the landslide of the airport,” Airports Company South Africa (ACSA) said in a statement, adding that the blaze had been “extinguished” with no injuries.
“As a precautionary measure, international departures have been temporarily suspended, and incoming international flights are being diverted,” the statement said, as the fire had affected “network and IT services.”
International flights that had already landed were still being processed, it said.
The fire occurred just days after the announcement of a major phased infrastructure upgrade project at the airport.
According to ACSA statistics, Cape Town airport recorded 11.1 million two-way passengers in 2025, including 3.33 million international travelers.










