By Roy Denish
Sri Lanka’s hunt for overseas fugitives is intensifying, with authorities tracking 95 Interpol Red Notice suspects and focusing on 30 high-value underworld figures believed to be directing drug trafficking, extortion and contract killings from abroad. Intelligence points to the UAE as the main sanctuary, while extradition efforts and cross-border cooperation have already brought several wanted suspects back to Sri Lanka.
The multi-year global hunting operation driven by the Sri Lankan government focuses heavily on a network of ninety-five active Interpol Red Notices, targeting ninety-five specific international fugitives who have managed to evade local jurisdiction. Within this broader group, law enforcement has pinpointed a critical tier of thirty high-value targets considered the masterminds of transnational networks. While a small handful of financial fraudsters have sought refuge behind the strict judicial criteria of Singapore or utilized human rights appeals to gain long-term asylum in Western Europe, the undisputed epicenter for the local underworld remains the United Arab Emirates. Government intelligence records indicate that twenty-nine out of the thirty high-profile crime bosses chose the glittering cities of Dubai and Abu Dhabi as their sanctuary, exploiting corporate free zones and premium investor visas to melt seamlessly into the landscape.
Despite the distance, these fugitives operate under a meticulous remote-control methodology that keeps them directly connected to the streets of Colombo. The operational strategy relies on heavily encrypted messaging platforms and untraceable satellite communication setups, allowing a boss to sit comfortably in a Gulf cafe while orchestrating major maritime shipments of narcotics into South Asia. Through these digital lifelines, they manage local patron-client street networks, order contract killings, and control multi-million-rupee extortion rackets, relying on the traditional, underground hawala banking system to move their illicit profits across borders without ever triggering traditional bank monitoring systems.
The definitive figurehead of this expatriate syndicate is the notorious underworld kingpin known across law enforcement channels as Kanjipani Imran. Even while operating from deep within his overseas haven, Imran managed to command a vast criminal empire by leveraging a highly disciplined system of remote cell management. His modus operandi involved utilizing intermediate handlers and burner lines to insulate himself from the actual execution of crimes, allowing him to direct high-volume drug distribution rings, coordinate tactical hits on rival gang members, and manage extortion rackets targeting local business owners while remaining thousands of miles away from a physical crime scene. However, the impunity of this remote system is breaking down under an aggressive, multi-year diplomatic push. Strengthened extradition cooperation and cross-border intelligence pooling have systematically targeted these hidden networks, resulting in the successful capture and repatriation of ten high-profile targets in 2024, another eleven in 2025, and a steady stream of tactical arrests continuing through the first half of 2026.
