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Sri Lanka: Armed gang sets fire to newspaper printshop
By W.A. Sunil
4 December 2007
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An armed gang broke into and set ablaze the printshop of Leader
Publications, south of Colombo, in the early hours of November
21. While no group has claimed responsibility, the circumstances
strongly point to the involvement of the security forces or associated
paramilitaries and thugs.
This open thuggery against a newspaper publisher is a part
of growing attack on the media unleashed under President Mahinda
Rajapakse with the escalation of the renewed war against the Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).
Leader Publications, which publishes two English-language newspapers,
the Sunday Leader and Morning Leader, and a Sinhala
weekly, Irudina, has been highly critical of the Rajapakse
government. In recent months, its outlets have carried a number
of articles about corruption in public institutions, the governments
underhand political and money dealings, the activities of pro-government
paramilitaries and violations of human rights.
These exposures reflect the views of sections of the ruling
elite and big business who have concerns that the expansion of
the civil war could produce deepening social unrest and political
opposition as well as military disasters and economic difficulties.
According to eyewitnesses, the attackers, armed with automatic
rifles, pistols and clubs, stormed into the Leader premises around
2.00 a.m. on November 21 and set fire to machinery, bundles of
the Morning Leader about to be delivered and rolls of printing
paper. Part of the roof was also damaged.
A security officer, R Karunaratna, told the WSWS: Firstly
four people entered the premises, forcibly jumping over the gate.
They took me by my shirt collar and forced me to open the gate.
Then another eight or nine people entered while two watched near
the gate. Then they dragged me to the press and ordered me at
gun point to kneel down on the ground. They had come by a jeep
and a van.
Chandana, a machine operator, said: They [the attackers],
except two, were masked with black cloths. They searched everywhere
and brought workers to the front. We were ordered to kneel down
at gunpoint. Three of us were attacked with clubs. They snatched
six mobile phones and three purses in workers pockets. Then
they poured petrol on the machinery, on bundles of Morning
Leader and paper rolls, and blasted something like a bomb.
They finished their job in around 15 minutes.
The Leader premises are located in a high-security zone. Ratmalana
airport, the Air Force base and housing complex are about a kilometre
away. The Kotelawala Defence Academy and an Army camp are also
nearby. Military checkpoints guard several local junctions.
Colombo is already in a state of high security alert. In high-security
zones around key buildings and military installations, restrictions
and checks are even tighter. For a heavily armed gang to move
into such an area without the cooperation or complicity of the
security forces is highly improbable.
Every circumstancethe location, the time, the weapons
and the professional methods employed by the gangpoints
to a connection to the security forces and related paramilitaries.
Sunday Leader chief editor Lasantha Wickrematunga accused
the Rajapakse government. It is a cowardly attack within
a high security zone by a regime that is acting like a terrorist
organisation, he told the media. The signs of government
involvement is so obvious that opposition United National Party
leader Ranil Wickremasinghe also blamed the government.
Leader Publications has been repeatedly targeted due to its
pro-opposition stance. A spokeswoman told the WSWS: This
is the second time our premises have been burned. The first was
in October 2005, in the midst of the presidential election. The
police took some people on suspicion but they were released later.
Now two years have passed but the police have failed to bring
the culprits to the book.
They [the attackers] have done serious damage this time.
It is clear the aim behind the attack is to disrupt the publishing
of our papers. At the movement we cannot say exactly who has done
this, but it is a part of continuous harassment.
She referred to frequent questioning by officers from the police
criminal investigation department (CID) about various reports
in Leader newspapers and the CIDs arrest of one of the groups
journalists, Arthur Wamanan, a few weeks ago over bogus ransom
charges made by a government minister.
Journalists along with local and international media organisations
have condemned the November 21 attack. The Free Media Movement
of Sri Lanka denounced it with outrage. More than
a hundred journalists demonstrated in front of Colombo port railway
station on November 23.
The International Press Institute (IPI) blamed the government.
IPI director Johann P. Fritz said: This latest attack on
Leader Publications bears all the hallmarks of a highly organised
attempt by groups close to the government to silence any critical
reporting. The IPT has again placed the country on its global
watch list for violations of media freedom.
The Rajapakse government has denied responsibility for the
attack. In what has now become a standard excuse, Media Minister
Anura Priyadharsana Yapa immediately claimed that the attack was
an attempt to embarrass the government and tarnish the good
image of the president. He added that the president had
asked the authorities to bring to book the culprits.
The governments record indicates that the opposite will
occur. Since President Rajapakse came to office in November 2005,
13 journalists have been killedthree this year alone. A
number of newspaper offices, particularly those of Tamil-language
papers, including Sudaroli in Jaffna and Udayan in
Colombo, have been attacked several times. In early November,
a E-thalaya web site journalist, Kumudu Champika Jayawardena,
was shot by two unidentified gunmen and critically injured. Official
investigations have failed to identify or charge anyone for these
crimes.
In October, the government rescinded the licence of the privately-owned
ABC radio network for false and irresponsible news
broadcasting. This was despite the networks immediate correction
of a report that armed men had infiltrated into Ranminithenna
town, 260 km south east of Colombo. On October 29, the government
introduced draconian emergency laws in the name of national
security, severely censoring reporting on military procurements
and operations, but had to withdraw the legislation because of
public opposition.
The government and the Sinhala extremist parties, such as the
Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna (JVP) and Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU)
have been conducting a continuous campaign against the media.
The latest attack on Leader Publications came just two days after
the government rammed what can only be described as a war budget
through parliament with a thin majority of just 16 votes. The
ruling Sri Lanka Freedom Party (SFLP) and its allies resorted
to an hysterical fear campaign, depicting those who opposed the
budget as LTTE supporters.
Amid mounting dissatisfaction among working people over poverty,
unemployment, attacks on democratic rights and the war, the Rajapakse
government cannot tolerate any, even limited, political opposition.
The November 21 attack was a signal that it will not hesitate
to take violent measures in dealing with its opponents.
See Also:
Sri Lankan defence secretary
menaces newspaper editor
[24 April 2007]
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