INDICTMENT AGAINST SRI LANKA
The Charge is Ethnic Cleansing
Sri Lanka's Undeclared War on Eelam Tamils
...in the Shadow of the Ceasefire: 2002 - 2007
- Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ)
reports on
attacks on Press Freedom in Sri Lanka, 11 March 2004
The
Sri Lankan government's fragile cease-fire with the separatist
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam reached in February 2002 after 20
years of fighting, held throughout 2003 and brought a measure of
stability to the media. But political tensions reached a crisis
point on November 4, when President Chandrika Kumaratunga suspended
Parliament and deployed troops in the capital, Colombo, while her
political rival, Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe, was out of the
country on an official visit to the United States.
Citing security concerns, Kumaratunga fired key ministers and
replaced them with her own appointees, including the minister of
information, who is in charge of Sri Lanka's far-reaching
state-controlled media. The president also replaced the editors of
state-run print and broadcast outlets with journalists aligned with
her People's Alliance party. The surprise move came one week after
the Tamil rebels proposed a peace plan that formally renounced their
goal of a separate state for Tamil nationals in Sri Lanka's northern
and eastern territories.
On November 5, Kumaratunga declared
a state of emergency and introduced temporary emergency provisions,
including media censorship and a ban on demonstrations. However,
none of these provisions was enacted since the state of emergency
was lifted two days later, on November 7, and replaced with less
severe regulations giving extended power to the military. In an
address to the country that day, Kumaratunga blamed the prime
minister's government for lapses in security and criticized his
handling of the peace process. Talks with the Tamil rebels were
suspended while the president and the prime minister faced off in a
political showdown over the right to represent the country at the
negotiating table. Unable to reach a compromise, Kumaratunga and
Wickremesinghe remained deadlocked at year's end.
Amid the
political crisis, local journalists groups called for the reform of
Sri Lanka's state-controlled media. In a November 6 press release,
the Sri Lankan press freedom group Free Media Movement called the
state-run media a "one-party propaganda machine," criticized the
government for appointing political allies to high-ranking positions
at media outlets, and urged the government to take "steps to
transform state media into genuine public service media
institutions."
The cease-fire brought journalists greater
access to northern and eastern Sri Lanka in 2003. The military
removed roadblocks and checkpoints, and there were fewer reported
attacks on members of the media, according to local journalists.
However, journalists say that self-censorship remains a major
obstacle. Many media outlets are state-run and toe the government's
party line, while other private publications and broadcasters
reflect specific political or ethnic viewpoints.
Journalists
who wrote critical stories about government officials and Tamil
rebel groups still risked threats and harassment in 2003. On May 7,
Ponniah Manikavasagam, a regular contributor to the BBC and a
correspondent for the Tamil-language daily Virakesari, received a
phone call at his home in Vavuniya accusing him of supporting the
LTTE and warning him that he would be "killed very soon." The call
was traced to an office run by the Eelam People's Revolutionary
Liberation Front, a Tamil group strongly opposed to the Tigers.
On August 7, a group of LTTE activists ambushed a truck delivering
the Tamil-language weekly Thinamurasu in Sunkankeni and burned about
5,000 copies. Thinamurasu is known for its reporting on LTTE human
rights abuses and supports the Eelam People's Democratic Party, a
Tamil opposition party. According to the newspaper, two of its local
correspondents also received death threats in June from an LTTE
leader in the northern district of Mannar.
In July,
Fisheries Minister Mahinda Wijesekera threatened to have Lasantha
Wickramatunga, the editor of The Sunday Leader, stabbed or shot to
death in retaliation for a series of investigative articles exposing
corruption in his ministry. The minister made the threat in the
lobby of Parliament in front of other government officials and also
alluded to plans to kill two other newspaper editors, Ravaya editor
Victor Ivan and Satana editor Rohana Kumara, according to a report
in The Sunday Leader. Although the minister issued a statement
denying those allegations, he reportedly made similar threats
against the journalists in a closed government meeting on August 4.
Sri Lankan press freedom groups condemned Wijesekera, but police
never investigated the threats, showing that a climate of impunity
continues to exist in Sri Lanka.
Committee to Protect
Journalists 330 Seventh Avenue, 12th floor New York, NY 10001
Tel: 212-465-1004 Fax: 212-465-9568 E-mail: [email protected]
Web:
http://www.cpj.org/
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