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WSWS : News
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Lanka
Abduction of journalist exposes police-state tactics in Sri
Lanka
By S. Jayanth
16 April 2007
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Sri Lankan journalist Parameshwari Munusamy was finally released
last month after being detained by police without charge for four
months. Her case is another example of the police-state measures
being employed President Mahinda Rajapakse to intimidate the media
and suppress any opposition to his renewed war.
Parameshwari and her friend Susanthi Thambirajah were seized
by police Special Task Force (STF) commandos on November 23 after
being lured to a spot near Savoy Cinema at Wellawatte in Colombo
with a story that Susanthis brother had been abducted. As
the two arrived, they were bundled into a vehicle and driven away.
Parameshwari works for the Mawbima newspaper.
The STF police handed over Parameshwari and Susanthi to the
notorious Terrorist Investigation Division (TID) in Colombo. Parameshwari
was told she would be released after making a statement, but was
only freed on March 22 after a sustained campaign by journalists
and human rights organisations in Sri Lanka and internationally.
Susanthi is still being held at the Boossa detention camp in southern
Sri Lanka.
In an interview with the World Socialist Web Site (WSWS),
Parameshwari explained: On November 23 last year, my room-mate
Susanthi got news at our boarding house that her younger brother
had been abducted at about 8 p.m. The caller presented himself
as her brother saying, I am waiting near the Savoy Theatre
on the main road. I am unable to get to my lodging at Modera [elsewhere
in Colombo] or to find my way to your place. Please tell me your
exact address. Susanthi felt it was her brothers voice.
However, I was suspicious and advised Susanthi not to
give out the address but to meet outside. I accompanied her. My
news reporters interest was aroused. I wanted to witness
what was going to happen and also thought my presence would help
my room-mate.
Before setting out, Parameshwari took the precaution of telephoning
several individuals and institutions, including the police, Tamil
National Alliance (TNA) parliamentarian Radhakirushnan, Nava Sama
Samaja Party (NSSP) leader Wickrambahu Karunaratne and the Eelam
Peoples Democratic Party (EPDP).
As we got down from the three-wheeler [taxi] near the
Savoy theatre I noticed a van without a number plate. Before I
could react, some thugs rushed out of the van and virtually lifted
us into it. When we tried to shout out, they threatened us. They
took us to our lodging, ransacked the place and, finding nothing
that could incriminate us, took us directly to the TID.
On the way they promised that I could return to my residence
after making a statement. But once I was at the TID, they kept
me for four months, grilling me repeatedly. We came to know that
they were police officers only when they took us there.
Parameshwari was told she was being held under the Prevention
of Terrorism Act (PTA), draconian legislation reactivated by President
Rajapakse last year as he intensified the war against the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). The PTA provides for protracted
detention without trial.
None of those who questioned me identified themselves,
thereby denying me the right to know who my interrogators were
and by what authority they were questioning me, Parameshwari
said. Her parents were only allowed to visit her only after two
weeks and then in front of the TID officers. She was finally permitted
to speak to a lawyer after a month.
Parameshwari continued: They asked me whether I attended
[LTTE leader] Prabhakarans press conference. They also wanted
to know whether I had any political discussions with the LTTE
leaders such as Pulidevan and Ilancherian at the LTTE headquarters
in Kilinochchi. I had not gone to those conferences and said so.
I knew these LTTE politicians only via the media. They checked
the [militarys] lists at the Omanthai checkpoint, which
one had to pass in order to enter the LTTE-controlled areas. This
confirmed my denial.
The interrogators also tried to intimidate Parameshwari, telling
her not to write for Mawbima and to admit that the newspaper
had connections with the LTTE. Parameshwari had been writing articles
on the militarys human rights violations. The newspaper,
while critical of the government, is not aligned to the LTTE.
Mawbimas owner has a close connection with Mangala
Samaraweera, a former senior minister sacked by Rajapakse in February.
In a bid to silence Samaraweera, the government is pursuing allegations
of corruption against him. Mawbima has also been targetted
and shut down following the arrest of its finance manager and
freezing of its funds.
The police and government ministers conducted a vicious witchhunt
against Parameshwari, accusing her of being an LTTE supporter.
Most Sinhala and English dailies as well as the Tamil daily Veerakesari
repeated the gross lie that in sharing a room with Susanthi,
Parameshwari had protected a suicide bomber. The day after their
arrest Lankadeepa, Divaina and the state-run Dinamina
published prominent stories falsely claiming that the police had
recovered explosives and claymore mines belonging to the pair.
However, the TID failed to prove any charges against Parameshwari
or Susanthi. Parameshwari filed a fundamental rights case as part
of the campaign for her release. A magistrates court finally
ordered she be freed on March 21. Susanthi has yet to be released.
The detention of Parameshwari and Susanthi took place in the
context of campaign by the government against any media critics,
who are routinely accused of threatening national security.
Since Rajapakse won the presidency in November 2005 and plunged
the island back to war, nine media workers have been killed, in
most cases by unknown gunmen thought be working with the military.
Parameshwari and Susanthi are just two of hundreds of people,
mainly Tamils, who have been detained or killed by Sri Lankan
security forces and associated paramilitaries. In many cases,
people have simply disappeared without any information about their
whereabouts or condition. The Rajapakse government has resorted
to such measures as the only means to silence the widespread opposition
to the war.
The Socialist Equality Party (SEP) is currently campaigning
for an urgent inquiry into the disappearance of party member Nadarajah
Wimaleswaran and his friend Sivanathan Mathivathanan on the evening
of March 22 on the northern Jaffna islands. All the evidence collected
to date by the SEP points to the involvement of the navy, which
controls the island of Kayts, and police. The defence ministry
and police have so far stonewalled SEP demands for an investigation
to locate the two men.
Letters demanding an inquiry into their disappearance can be
sent to:
Gotabhaya Rajapakse,
Secretary of Ministry of Defence,
15/5 Baladaksha Mawatha,
Colombo 3, Sri Lanka
Fax: 009411 2541529
e-mail: secretary@defence.lk
N. G. Punchihewa
Director of Complaints and Inquiries,
Sri Lanka Human Rights Commission,
No. 36, Kinsey Road,
Colombo 8, Sri Lanka
Fax: 009411 2694924
Copies should be sent to the Socialist Equality Party (Sri
Lanka) and the World Socialist Web Site.
Socialist Equality Party,
P.O. Box 1270,
Colombo, Sri Lanka.
Email: wswscmb@sltnet.lk
To send letters to the WSWS editorial board please use this
online
form.
See Also:
Sri Lankan authorities provide no answers
over disappearance of SEP member
[10 April 2007]
Resolution adopted by the ISSE/SEP Emergency
Conference Against War on the disappearance of SEP member in Sri
Lanka
[6 April 2007]
Sri Lankan authorities continue to stall
over disappearance of SEP member
[5 April 2007]
Sri Lankan SEP demands urgent
inquiry into disappearance of party member
[26 March 2007]
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