Click here to read more about press freedom conditions in SRI LANKA.
New York, April 7, 2000 --- CPJ condemns the April 6 assault
on Elmo Fernando, correspondent for the BBC's Sinhala-language service.
Fernando was attacked in front of the Norwegian embassy in the capital
city of Colombo by a group of demonstrators protesting Norway's attempts
to mediate a peace agreement that would end Sri Lanka's 16-year-old
civil war.
The demonstration was led by members of the Buddhist clergy and the
National Movement Against Terrorism, a Sinhalese organization bitterly
opposed to negotiating with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE)
guerrilla movement, which seeks an independent homeland for Sri Lanka's
ethnic Tamil minority.
Upon seeing Fernando, a group of demonstrators began shouting slogans
accusing the BBC of being biased in favor of the LTTE. Fernando, who
was covering the demonstration for the Sinhala-language program "Sandeshaya,"
was then assaulted while trying to record their chants.
"They shouted against the BBC and me, and then someone hit me from
behind," Fernando told Agence France-Presse.
Fernando suffered minor injuries before he was rescued by other journalists.
Sri Lanka's increasingly violent political climate is taking its
toll on journalists. CPJ is investigating the April 3 bomb attack
on the home of Nellai G. Nadesan, a columnist for Veerakesari,
the country's leading Tamil-language newspaper.
Two journalists were killed while on assignment in Sri Lanka in 1999,
and three others were assassinated for reasons that remain unknown.
END