New York, February 24, 2010—One month after the disappearance of her husband Prageeth Eknelygoda, the journalist’s wife, Sandhya Eknelygoda , told CPJ that she has not been able to get police or other government officials to actively investigate the case.
“I have written to the president and have not gotten a response,” Eknelygoda said today. Our children want their father back, and we have not gotten a single word about where he is.”
Prageeth
Eknelygoda, a political reporter and cartoonist for Lanka eNews, disappeared on the night of January
24. Several CPJ sources said they fear he was abducted. Eknelygoda was
described by colleagues as a political analyst who supported opposition
presidential candidate Sarath Fonseka, who was jailed shortly after he lost the
January 26 presidential election to incumbent Mahinda Rajapaksa.
Lanka eNews
cannot be accessed in Sri Lanka, though the site is available
outside the country. Access was blocked around the time of Eknelygoda ’s
disappearance, two days before voting started.
“The
continuing unexplained disappearance of Prageeth Eknelygoda is a chilling
reminder of the dangers Sri Lankan journalists face,” said Robert Mahoney,
CPJ’s deputy director. “The lack of response by authorities to his wife’s pleas
for an investigation are frightening given the impunity with which journalists
have been abused in Sri Lanka.”
On
January 29, CPJ
expressed alarm over reports that Sri Lankan journalists have been
subjected to government intimidation, arrests, censorship, and harassment in
the aftermath of the January 26 presidential election. The situation has
not improved since then, according to many journalists in the country.
Sandhya
Eknelygoda said she last saw her husband when he left for work around 7:30 a.m.
on the morning of January 24. After he did not return home that evening, she
filed a complaint with the local police office at 11:30 a.m. on the next day.
She said police refused to accept the complaint, and only began to look into the
case two weeks later. A complaint she filed to Sri Lanka’s Human Rights
Commission has not resulted in any more information, though the commission
launched an investigation on February 12. Her attorneys have filed a case in
the Court of Appeal, asking the
government to reveal if they are holding him. The case is still being
adjudicated.
Eknelygoda
said her husband was previously abducted by unidentified individuals in August
2009, but released the next day. He had been handcuffed and blindfolded. The
incident was never explained nor prosecuted by police. The couple have two
sons, ages 16 and 13.
Sri
Lanka ranks 13th on CPJ’s list of
journalists killed for their work, and fourth on the CPJ
Global Impunity Index. In
March 2009, CPJ released Failure
to Investigate, a report detailing
attacks on journalists in the country and the government’s inability to bring
prosecutions in the deaths of journalists.

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