Sri Lankan war-hero spending nights on cement floor in jail

Written By DNA Web Team | Updated:

Sri Lanka's war-hero Sarath Fonseka, who once commanded his troops against the LTTE, has been lodged in a solitary cell where he sleeps on a mat on the cement floor, attired in ill-fitting prison clothes.

Sri Lanka's war-hero Sarath Fonseka, who once commanded his troops against the LTTE, has been lodged in a solitary cell where he sleeps on a mat on the cement floor, attired in ill-fitting prison clothes.

Jailed on corruption charges, Fonseka, who was transferred from his detention centre on Thursday after President Mahinda Rajapaksa put his seal on his sentence, has been taken in as a regular prisoner.

"Fonseka, now Prisoner No: 0/22032, changed from a national dress into an ill-fitting jumper, the regular attire for convicts and slept the night on a mat on the cement floor. He had only one pillow," the Sunday Times newspaper said.

The 59-year-old former war hero whose sentence recommended by a court martial was confirmed by President Mahinda Rajapaksa as the commander in chief of the Sri Lankan armed forces was moved from detention at the naval headquarters to Welikada prison here.

On September 17, the second court martial against Fonseka, the leader of the opposition Democratic National Alliance (DNA), found him guilty of all four counts in a case related to the procurement of weapons by the army in violation of the tender procedures and recommended that he be jailed for up to three years.

According to a report though the Court Martial sentenced Fonseka to a rigorous jail term upto three years, the Sri Lankan president commuted it to 30-months. 

Fonseka, who successfully led the Sri Lankan military in the war against the LTTE which ended in May last year, was charged with favouring a company headed by his son-in-law, who is also an accused in a separate case filed in the high court on the same charges.

"It was close upon midnight Thursday when former army Commander Sarath Fonseka was escorted into an isolated cell in Ward "S" at the high security Welikada Prison," says the Sunday Times.

It says he was woken up at 5 am on Friday, like all other inmates in the block and though his cell had a toilet he complained the flush was not working.

"He had to walk to a water tank outside the ward. There, he had to use a bucket to draw water to wash or bathe. 

Later, with a metal jug on one hand and a metal plate on the other, he stood in the queue with other convicts to be served breakfast.

"It was rice and Pol Sambol. As a prelude to Prison officials assigning him his daily chores, a doctor examined him. Tailors at the prison also took his correct measurements to provide him more jumpers to suit his size," says the newspaper.

"For lunch on Friday, he joined the queue again with the metal cup and plate.

"Lunch was rice, a watery cucumber curry, dhal, a vegetable Mellun (dry curry or condiment made of minced leaves or fruit and scraped coconut) with a small piece of fish and gravy. Immediately thereafter, he was back in his cell until 2 pm.

"After a short break outside with more chores, he returned to the cell at 7 pm. The lights go out at that time and he would have to sleep in the darkness until dawn next morning.

"That will now be the daily routine for Fonseka, the former Commander of the Army, who led troops for the military defeat of Tiger guerrillas in May last year," it said. 

The verdict came a few weeks after Fonseka was stripped of all his ranks and pension by the first court martial that convicted him of the charge of dabbling in politics while in uniform.