New
York, April 29, 2005The Committee to Protect Journalists condemns
the brutal killing of leading Tamil journalist Dharmeratnam Sivaram, who
was abducted yesterday and found dead this morning near the capital, Colombo,
from gunshot wounds to the head.
Four unidentified men forced Sivaram into a jeep at 10:30 last night as
he left a restaurant directly across from the Bambalapitya police station
in the capital, according to witness accounts. Police told The Associated
Press that they received an anonymous call early today giving the location
of Sivaram's body in Talangama, several miles outside of Colombo. The
TamilNet news Web site reported that his body was found in a high
security area behind the country's parliament building.
A founding member and contributor to the TamilNet and a military
and political columnist for the English language Daily Mirror,
Sivaram wrote sympathetically about the rebel group the Liberation Tigers
of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). Police searched his house twice last year looking
for weapons, but did not find anything to incriminate him.
The LTTE split into two warring factions last spring after a rebel leader
known as Colonel Karuna broke away to form his own rival army in eastern
Sri Lanka. A cycle of violence has since escalated from the east throughout
the country, with the warring Tamil factions going on killing sprees that
target each other's alleged supporters, including journalists.
A pro-LTTE Tamil lawmaker Amirthanathan Adaikkalanathan told The Associated
Press that Sivaram's last article for the Tamil-language daily Virekasari
criticized the rebel leader Karuna. Sivaram had received death threats
in recent weeks, according to exiled Tamil journalists.
The Sri Lankan government condemned the murder, and promised to find those
behind the killing.
"This audacious and brutal crime is an attack on free speech in Sri Lanka,"
CPJ Executive Director Ann Cooper said. "The brazen abduction and execution
of a veteran journalist sends a chilling message to others in the Tamil
media. We call on all sides to respect the rights and safety of journalists,
and we urge authorities to follow through on their pledges to thoroughly
investigate this cold-blooded killing."
In May 2004, unidentified assailants ambushed, shot, and killed another
senior Tamil journalist, Aiyuthurai Nadesan, in the eastern city Batticaloa.
In reports on the TamilNet Web site, the LTTE accused the Sri Lankan
army and members of the Karuna faction of killing Nadesan. No arrests
have been made in that case.
Bala Nadarajah Iyera veteran activist, writer, and editor affiliated
with the Tamil group the Eelam People's Democratic Party, which backed
the Karuna factionwas gunned down outside his house in Colombo just
weeks later. The murder was blamed on the LTTE, according to international
news reports and local sources.
Peace talks between Tamil rebels and the government have stalled since
a ceasefire agreement was signed in February 2002.

|