New York, September 6, 2005 – The Committee to Protect Journalists
condemns a spate of attacks on the Tamil-language newspaper Sudar Oli,
including the killing of a printing press security guard and assaults
on reporters.
"We call on the authorities to investigate these vicious attacks and bring
those responsible to justice," said CPJ Executive Director Ann Cooper.
"The government has a responsibility to ensure the safety of journalists
whose lives are increasingly endangered by political violence."
Assailants have twice thrown hand grenades into Sudar Oli premises.
On August 29, two men lobbed grenades into the building housing the printing
press, killing a guard and injuring two other staff members. Prime Minister
Mahinda Rajapakse last week condemned the attack as an assault on freedom
of expression. On August 21 two grenades were tossed into the paper's
advertising office but failed to explode.
On August 30 two parliamentary reporters were assaulted while they waited
for a bus, according to the Colombo-based Free Media Movement (FMM) and
international news reports. One was seriously injured. A photographer
was set upon and robbed on August 23 while covering a rally of the People's
Liberation Front (JVP) to protest killings by the rebel Liberation Tigers
of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). JVP activists turned the photographer over to the
police on suspicion of being an LTTE member. He was released the next
day.
Sudar Oli and its Jaffna-based sister publication Uthayan have
come under attack by both LTTE and anti-LTTE forces in Sri Lanka's civil
conflict. A top leader of the JVP recently issued a public condemnation
of the newspaper, accusing it of having LTTE ties. Increased political
violence in recent months has put Tamil journalists at particular risk.
In April, senior Tamil journalist Dharmeratnam Sivaram was abducted outside
a Colombo restaurant and murdered, and in August, popular Tamil broadcaster
Relangi Selvarajah was shot and killed with her husband in the capital.

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