New
York, December 1, 2008--The
Committee to Protect Journalists mourns the death of Hindu-language daily Hindustan correspondent Vikas Ranjan in
the northern Indian state of Bihar on November
25.
Ranjan was shot in the town of Rosera
in the state's central Samastipur district, according to Alok Mohit, news
editor of English-language sister paper the Hindustan
Times in Bihar's capital of Patna,
who spoke with CPJ by telephone this morning. Three men on motorbikes fired
several shots at Ranjan as he left his office for the evening, according to
local news reports. He was declared dead on arrival at the local hospital, the
reports said.
Ranjan's murder may have been connected to his work as a
part-time local correspondent for Hindustan. Mohit, who had spoken with Ranjan's
colleagues in Samastipur, told CPJ that Ranjan wrote extensively on crime and
corruption, and had been receiving threats for some time. Three of his recent
reports on counterfeit merchandise and stolen goods trafficking had sparked
official inquiries, according to Mohit. Police are reportedly investigating the
murder.
"We call for the investigation into Vikas Ranjan's murder to
be immediate, thorough, and transparent," said Bob
Dietz, CPJ Asia program coordinator. "Correspondents in
remote areas should be protected from attacks made in retribution for their
reporting."
Police in the nearby northeastern Indian state of Assam are still
investigating the motive for the murder of local daily Amar Asom correspondent
Jagjit
Saikia, who was shot dead on November 20. That death appeared to be related
to a local insurgency.
India
ranks at number 13 on CPJ's Impunity
Index, a list of countries where governments have consistently failed to
solve journalists' murders.