SRI LANKA: DEATH ROW PRISONERS END HUNGER STRIKE

Sri Lanka's president Gotabaya Rajapaksa

01 July 2021 :

Death row prisoners in Sri Lanka, who were on a hunger strike demanding commutation of their sentences, similar to the Presidential pardon extended to a former parliamentarian facing capital punishment earlier in the week, have ended their protest after official assurances of representation, authorities said on 26 June 2021.
Over 175 prisoners on death row from the Main Welikada Prison and the Mahara Prison in north Colombo started a hunger strike on 24 June, demanding that either they be hanged or their sentences be commuted to life terms.
Speaking to the media on 26 June, Prisons Spokesman Chandana Ekanayake said the striking death row prisoners have ended their protest.
"Yesterday, the Secretary to the State Ministry of Prisons visited them (the prisoners) and informed them on the official interventions on their behalf," Ekanayake said.
The hunger strike was triggered by President Gotabaya Rajapaksa's decision to grant a presidential pardon to Duminda Silva, a former parliamentarian from the ruling SLPP who was sentenced to death after a political killing in 2011.
Silva's pardon caused much controversy with the lawyers' body - Bar Association of Sri Lanka - questioning if the proper legal discourse had been followed.
Silva was set free from Welikada Prison on 24 June.
The former parliamentarian and 12 others were accused of 17 charges, including the murder of his political rival and another lawmaker Bharatha Lakshman Premachandra and four others in 2011. A special three-member panel of High Court judges acquitted seven suspects and sentenced five, including Silva, to death in 2016.
Silva was released in addition to 93 prisoners, including 16 LTTE terror suspects, who were also pardoned by the president.

 

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