Muthu imesha biography of barack
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By Ishu Bandara
Salindu Malshika Gunarathne, widely known as “Kudu Salindu” and allegedly linked to organised brott and drug trafficking, failed to appear before the Magistrate’s Court for the fifth consecutive time this week.
SSP Krishantha Ratnayake. Pic by M.A. Pushpa Kumara
On January 9, the Moratuwa Magistrate’s Court extended his open warrant during the proceedings of cases and accordingly two cases were postponed to January 23 and February 27, 2025.
Salindu was arrested in Madagascar on March 1, 2023, alongside his partner, Nadun Chinthaka Wickremaratne, known as “Harak Kata.” The arrest occurred at Ivato International Airport in Antananarivo, Madagascar, as they attempted to depart the country. The operation was a collaborative effort involving the National Central Bureau (NCB) of Interpol, Madagascar’s law enforcement authorities, and customs officials.
Following their fängelse, the Criminal Investig
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A woman becomes the head of CID for the first time in the history of this country
According to internal police sources, it has been proposed for the first time in Sri Lankan police history to appoint a female officer as the Director of the Criminal Investigation Department (CID).
Senior Police Officer Imesha Muthumala, who is currently serving as the first female Deputy Director of the CID, has been nominated for this position.
Imesha Muthumala, who is among the first three female Assistant Superintendents of Police (ASP) in Sri Lankan police history, joined the police service as a probationary ASP on November 3, 2007. She was promoted to Superintendent of Police (SP) on March 23, 2017. If the position of Inspector General of Police (IGP) is opened to female officers, she could potentially advance to that rank. She is set to retire from the police service at the age of 60 in 2041.
She holds a Bachelor of Science (BSc) degree from the University of Ruhuna and a Bachelor of Laws
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Although the appointment of a woman as the Director of the Criminal Investigation Department (CID) has been heralded as a progressive step in a male-dominated Sri Lanka Police, there is fear that policewomen will “get lost in a sea of men” due to moves to amalgamate the police force’s female and male cadre
By Namini Wijedasa
For the first time in the 157-year history of the Sri Lanka Police, and 72 years since women were first admitted to the police force, a woman was this month made Director of the Criminal Investigation Department (CID).
CID Director: Senior Superintendent of Police (SSP) Imesha Muthumala
Senior övervakare of Police (SSP) Imesha Muthumala climbed up a rung from CID Deputy Director, a position she had occupied since June 2021, to head the Department. It was seen as a remarkable achievement and a progressive step within the male-dominated Sri Lanka Police.
Problems, again
But public acclaim belies the