Skip to content
Search

Latest Stories

Lanka's ousted president Gotabaya applies for US citizenship restoration: report

In 2019, Rajapaksa renounced his US citizenship to contest the 2019 presidential polls. As per Sri Lankan Constitution, dual citizenship holders are barred from contesting elections.

Lanka's ousted president Gotabaya applies for US citizenship restoration: report

Sri Lanka's ousted president Gotabaya Rajapaksa, who fled the country in July last year and then returned after nearly two months, has applied for restoration of his US citizenship after he failed to get asylum in any country, according to a media report.

However, the US government is yet to consider the request, The Sunday Times newspaper here reported.


In 2019, Rajapaksa renounced his US citizenship to contest the 2019 presidential polls. As per Sri Lankan Constitution, dual citizenship holders are barred from contesting elections.

"An appeal by his lawyers to the US government -- more pointedly the Department of State to restore his citizenship, which he renounced to contest the November 2019 presidential election, has still not been considered,” the report said on Sunday.

The former president and his immediate family are currently in Dubai on holiday.

Rajapaksa, 73, had made the appeal for the restoration of his US Citizenship after he failed to seek asylum in any country upon fleeing Sri Lanka during the anti-government protests in 2022, the report said.

An appeal to restore US citizenship previously held is a costly legal process and time-consuming, the report said.

The disgraced former president fled Sri Lanka on July 13 last year to the Maldives. From there, he travelled to Singapore and then to Thailand. He flew back home on September 2.

(PTI)

More For You

substance use

15 per cent of participants had used a substance at least once, while 10 per cent had done so in the past year. (Photo for representation: iStock)

Getty Images/iStockphoto

Indian students start using substances at age 12, survey finds

A SURVEY of school students from 10 cities in India has found that they begin using substances between the ages of 12 and 13, indicating that support and guidance are needed before they reach middle school.

The researchers, including those from the All India Institute of Medical Sciences (AIIMS) in New Delhi, said that with each year the start of substance use is delayed, the likelihood of developing a substance use disorder decreases.

Keep ReadingShow less