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Former Sri Lanka president Mahinda Rajapakse's brother Gotabhaya directed a top-secret death squad which targeted journalists and dissidents, a court was told Monday. Criminal Investigations Department (CID) told the Mount Lavinia magistrate's court that Gotabhaya Rajapakse, who was Sri Lanka's defence secretary during his brother's rule, directed a secret unit which is accused of assassinating a newspaper editor in January 2009.
The CID said it found evidence that the death squad was controlled by Gotabhaya Rajapakse who has already publicly denied involvement in the killing of former Sunday Leader editor Lasantha Wickrematunga.
"Testimony from the former army commander (Sarath Fonseka) shows that there was a special secret unit outside his authority and controlled by Gotabhaya Rajapakse through the then chief of national intelligence Kapila Hendawitharana," said a CID report which was read out in the court.
"This unit was operated outside the army command structure and was used to target journalists and other dissidents," added the report. Fonseka who led Sri Lanka's successful military campaign against Tamil rebels in 2009 fell out of grace after he unsuccessfully challenged Rajapakse at January 2010 elections.
Rajapakse had been accused of ordering the killing of many dissidents, but Monday's police report is the first to implicate him in an ongoing court case.
Wickrematunga's killing, which sparked an international outcry, drew attention to violence against Sri Lanka's media during Rajapakse's tenure that ended in 2015 when he lost elections by an opposition alliance.
In a written report to court, the CID said a fresh autopsy revealed that Wickrematunga had been stabbed to death and not shot as previously recorded in the original death certificate.
Wickrematunga's body was exhumed in September for a fresh forensic test after allegations that the original autopsy report had been falsified to deliberately mislead investigators.
The Mount Lavinia Court also ordered police to carry our further investigations and arrest any suspects involved.
Speaking to AFP after Monday's court hearing, a senior police officer said that authorities were close to making more arrests over the murder, after five military intelligence officers were detained last month.
"Now that the cause of death has been firmly established, we can proceed with making further arrests," the officer said on condition of anonymity.
Wickrematunga had accused Gotabhaya of taking kickbacks in arms purchases, including a deal to buy used MiG jet fighters, and was due to testify against him in court when he was killed.
Rajapakse and several members of his family are under investigation for large-scale fraud and murder during his 10 years as president, in which 17 journalists and media workers were killed.
All deny any wrongdoing and in turn accuse the new government of a political vendetta.
A retired army intelligence officer was found hanging at his home in October with a note claiming responsibility for Wickrematunga's death.
But police have said they do not believe the claim and are treating the officer's death as a murder.

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