The dramatic arrest of Ishara Sewwandi in Nepal exposed a network of smuggling, bribery, and deception. Her months-long escape plan, from luxury hideouts to fake passports, ended the moment Sri Lankan and Nepalese police moved in, rejecting even a 50-lakh bribe that tried to buy her freedom.
The Sri Lankan underworld has never lacked drama, but even within its bloody archives the story of Ishara Sewwandi stands apart. Considered the mastermind behind the assassination of underworld leader Ganemulla Sanjeewa inside the Aluthkade court complex, she imagined her escape would outsmart even the most determined police. She believed her path was secured with safehouses, loyal smugglers, international routes, and even a lookalike prepared to lend her identity for a fake European passport. Yet fear followed her into hiding. She confessed later, “I thought Olugala sir would come and arrest me at any time. I was feeling bad after being stuck in Nepal for 7 months. I thought it would be better to go to Sri Lanka than to stay like this. But I stayed here because I would be caught by the police if I went to Sri Lanka.” Those words revealed not only her paranoia but also the inevitability of her fate. Seven months after she fled Colombo, the knock on her luxury door in Nepal confirmed that no plan, however elaborate, could withstand the patience and persistence of law enforcement.
The arrest was the culmination of a carefully planned international operation led by Assistant Superintendent of Police Rohan Olugala and Inspector Gihan de Silva of the Criminal Investigation Department. Coordinating with Nepal Police and Interpol, the officers dismantled a network that had allowed Sewwandi to hide in comfort while planning her future. She had chosen Bhaktapur District’s Thibbos Park as her fortress, an area known for its historic architecture and expensive homes. Luxury rents shielded her from suspicion, yet within those walls her mind raced to finalize a European escape. She intended to assume the identity of Takshi, a Tamil woman from Chavakachcheri who resembled her closely. By using Takshi’s photographs and biometric data, Sewwandi would obtain a fake passport that promised her a new life across the continent. The scheme was engineered by Kennedy Bastianpillai, better known as J.K. Bhai, a smuggler with a reputation for moving criminals across seas and borders with ease.
The chain unraveled because Olugala refused to rest. Intelligence gathered from questioning Kehelbaddara Padme, the drug kingpin who financed and organized much of Sri Lanka’s underworld, pointed investigators toward Kathmandu. Olugala and de Silva traveled discreetly, rented a house directly beside Sewwandi’s hideout, and waited. From their vantage point they studied her routines, tracked her associates, and prepared the trap. The first move was to capture J.K. Bhai, the man who had smuggled Sewwandi from Sri Lanka to India by boat and then escorted her by train for six days across the subcontinent before settling her in Nepal. Once Bhai was interrogated, the precise location of her luxury safehouse was revealed.
The final raid stripped away her illusions of safety. Confronted by Olugala, Sewwandi gasped and whispered in disbelief, “Olugala Sir!” The officer, calm and deliberate, replied with a sharp greeting: “Ah… how is the girl?” With the assistance of Nepalese female officers, she was placed under arrest. Her months of paranoia crystallized in that single moment, as the nightmare she had feared became reality.
What followed widened the operation. Under interrogation, Sewwandi revealed more about Padme’s network. Three additional criminals were captured from another Kathmandu residence, including the notorious Gampaha Baba. In a desperate attempt to escape, Baba offered Olugala a bribe of Rs. 5 million, the equivalent of fifty lakhs. The money was meant to purchase silence and freedom. The offer was rejected instantly. Olugala’s refusal carried significance beyond the moment, showing that no amount of illicit wealth could derail the mission. With that rejection, the credibility of the operation strengthened, and the underworld’s arrogance was exposed as futile.
To understand the gravity of this arrest, one must revisit the killing that set the chain of events in motion. On February 19, Ganemulla Sanjeewa was gunned down inside the Aluthkade court complex in Colombo. The murder was executed by Commando Salindu, a former special forces soldier who entered the premises disguised as a lawyer. His role was direct, to fire the shots. Sewwandi’s role was more intricate, ensuring timing, logistics, and deception. Disguised as a lawyer herself, she orchestrated the local aspects of the assassination. Police inquiries later confirmed that she had plotted Sanjeewa’s death multiple times before, including failed attempts during his transfers to courts in Attanagalla and Gampaha. Each attempt faltered until the Aluthkade plan succeeded.
Salindu was caught in Puttalam soon after, while trying to reach Mannar in a van in hopes of escaping to India. Sewwandi evaded capture. Investigators later discovered that she had boarded a boat to India before continuing north into Nepal under J.K. Bhai’s protection. For months she shifted between safehouses across Sri Lanka, including Mathugama, Middeniya, and Jaffna, before finally leaving the island. Each stop relied on local operatives. Police suspect that Sampath Manamperi, another figure in the criminal web, may have facilitated her hiding in Middeniya.
Her survival strategy reflected the underworld’s broader playbook: keep moving, lean on smugglers, exploit corruption, and prepare identities that can outwit border controls. J.K. Bhai’s smuggling routes, Padme’s financial backing, and Takshi’s resemblance formed the backbone of her plan. Yet as Padme’s empire collapsed in Indonesia and associates were rounded up, the protective net around her shrank. By the time officers closed in on Kathmandu, her network was in tatters.
The arrest underscored several truths about organized crime. First, it revealed the sophistication of networks that operate seamlessly across borders. Second, it highlighted the reliance of criminals on bribery as the ultimate shield. Third, it showed that even elaborate escape strategies crumble under sustained international cooperation. The 50-lakh bribe attempt epitomized the arrogance of the underworld, assuming that money could always dictate outcomes. The refusal of the bribe by Olugala sent a resounding message: not this time.
The capture of Sewwandi also provided law enforcement with invaluable intelligence. Her ties to Padme’s cartel, her dependence on J.K. Bhai’s smuggling services, and her planned use of Takshi for identity theft exposed vulnerabilities in the underworld’s operations. Each revelation tightened the net on those still at large. For the Sri Lankan public, the story became a cautionary tale of how crime, no matter how cleverly masked, inevitably leads back to accountability.
Beyond the immediate arrests, the operation carried symbolic weight. It demonstrated that Sri Lanka’s law enforcement, often criticized for inefficiency or corruption, could execute complex international missions with precision. It showcased the effectiveness of cooperation with Nepal Police and Interpol. It reinforced the reputation of officers like Olugala and de Silva, whose persistence and incorruptibility broke through layers of deception.
For Sewwandi, the final days of freedom were poisoned by the very fear she articulated: the certainty that Olugala would come for her. Her luxury house in Bhaktapur, once a refuge, became her prison. The photographs, documents, and plans she assembled to reinvent herself in Europe became worthless scraps. The woman who had once orchestrated murder with cold calculation now stood exposed, betrayed by her own paranoia and undone by the persistence of those she underestimated.
The implications ripple beyond one arrest. They signal a warning to networks that thrive on smuggling and bribery. They reassure a public weary of underworld impunity. They mark a rare moment when justice outpaced deceit. For the underworld, the message is clear: distance, money, and disguises cannot guarantee safety. For law enforcement, the challenge is to build on this success, dismantling remaining networks with equal determination.
From Colombo’s chaotic courts to Kathmandu’s quiet luxury, the fall of Ishara Sewwandi is a story of arrogance destroyed by persistence. She believed money and disguises would shield her. She believed luxury and distance would insulate her. In the end, none of it mattered when the knock on the door came. Her escape plan, stitched together with smuggling, bribery, and deception, unraveled completely. The woman who once played lawyer to stage a murder now faces her own judgment, not in the secrecy of luxury hideouts, but in the full glare of justice.
