A tense meeting with IMF representatives has triggered fresh political fallout in Sri Lanka after MP Archchuna Ramanathan raised explosive corruption allegations against senior figures in the government, deepening pressure on an administration already under scrutiny over transparency and accountability.
At a special discussion held between representatives of the International Monetary Fund and leaders of Sri Lanka’s political parties, a wave of serious allegations was directed at several powerful members of the current administration. The exchange has now become a major talking point in national politics, with opposition voices and internal sources suggesting that the government has been pushed into a deeply uncomfortable position at a sensitive time.
Jaffna District parliamentarian Archchuna Ramanathan argued during the meeting that the present government has no moral authority to speak about fighting corruption while such accusations remain unresolved. His intervention reportedly shifted the tone of the discussion, placing anti-corruption credibility, political integrity, and government accountability at the center of the conversation in front of international financial observers.
Speaking while IMF officials were reviewing Sri Lanka’s progress and claims surrounding the anti-corruption process, the MP is said to have challenged the government on three key issues. His remarks were framed as a direct test of whether the administration’s public promises on clean governance match the allegations now circulating around major state decisions and senior political figures.
According to the claims raised at the meeting, 323 containers were allegedly released illegally from the port with the knowledge of Speaker Jagath Wickramaratne and Cabinet Minister Bimal Rathnayake, an accusation that Archchuna described as major corruption. The claim, if proven, would carry serious implications for governance, customs oversight, and the wider credibility of the state’s anti-corruption drive.
Archchuna also raised allegations against Cabinet Minister Kumara Jayakody, claiming that hundreds of crores of rupees were misappropriated in the coal import process. In the same discussion, he reportedly repeated that serious corruption accusations were also hanging over Speaker Jagath Wickramaratne. These claims remain allegations, but their presentation before IMF representatives has sharply increased their political weight and public visibility.
When the MP reportedly asked whether the International Monetary Fund was aware of these matters, the representatives are said to have indicated that they had at least some knowledge of the issues. During that same moment, Deputy Minister of Finance Dr. Anil Jayantha Fernando reportedly attempted to respond on behalf of the government and present its side of the matter as the discussion grew more uncomfortable.
The meeting, chaired by Deputy Speaker Rizvie Salih, was attended by IMF delegation head Evan Papageorgiou, Central Bank Governor Dr. Nandalal Weerasinghe, and opposition parliamentarians including Ravi Karunanayake, Mano Ganesan, and Hizbullah. The presence of such senior financial and political figures gave the exchange added significance, particularly because the issue of corruption remains closely tied to Sri Lanka’s reform commitments and international confidence.
According to reports, Deputy Minister Anil Jayantha later complained to the President and other senior government leaders that he had been deeply embarrassed by the accusations made by MP Archchuna during the meeting. That reaction has only added to speculation that the government was caught off guard by the scale and directness of the allegations raised before IMF officials.
Government insiders now claim that the administration is facing serious internal political pressure as a result of the incident. Those same internal sources say the fallout has intensified behind the scenes, leaving the government under growing strain as questions over corruption, accountability, and credibility continue to gather force.
