Sujeewa Senasinghe Caught With Pants Down For Vehicle Permit Abuse: SC Refuses To Intervene
August 18, 2016
The Yahapalanaya Government which came to power pledging to rid abuse appears to be following in the footsteps of the former regime, with ministers in the current government being involved in various forms of misuse which has resulted in the country losing millions but the ministers earning in millions.
Deputy Minister of International Trade Sujeewa Senasinghe, who was a vociferous campaigner against thecorruption of the Mahinda Rajapaksa led former regime has been accused of selling his duty free car permit.
The vehicle being transferred to the name of the vehicle permit buyer Ali Akbar Salehbhai
This came to light when the Duty Free Vehicle Permit Abuse case was taken up at the Supreme Court recently. The case is filed by rights activist Nagananda Kodituwakku. According to Kodituwakku, the permits are sold at 25 million rupees or more in the open market by MPs, with buyers permitted to import any vehicle of their choice with no limitation of the engine capacity. Already over 34 units of Toyota Land Cruiser vehicles have been imported abusing these permits, with entire tax element exempted and only data entry fee of Rs 1750/- charged by Customs.
The case was taken up after Chief Justice K. Sripavan who took up the car permit abuse issue in late July, permitted Kodituwakku to make a written submission over the alleged car permit abuse by MPs.
When the case was taken up this month, Kodituwakku supported his argument with documentary evidence which showed how MPs were abusing the duty free vehicle permits. He requested the Supreme Court to provide a full bench hearing on the basis that it was a case of national importance.
After coming to power, the Maithripala Sirisena – Ranil Wickremesinghe led administration, having appraised the colossal losses sustained under the Mahinda Rajapaksa administration, in its first financial policy statement presented in the parliament on November 20, 2015 declared that government had incurred a heavy loss of over 40 billion rupees on tax free car permits, therefore the administration proposed to abolish all such permits altogether including the permits issued to MPs which was openly abused by them.
However, few months later, the same Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake who presented the initial fiscal policy statement made a U turn and made an order (published in the Gazette (No 1965/2 of 02nd May 2016) under Sec 3C of Excise (Special Provisions) Act exempting levies on motor vehicles imported by MPs with CIF value up to US $ 62,500/. However, as required by the law to protect the government revenue, there was no condition whatsoever imposed against the abuse of such permits, allowing MPs to sell their permits in the open market.