topleft
topright

Welcome to MHM

Media Helping Media (MHM) is for all involved in strengthening journalism in areas where media freedom is under threat. Read more iconRead more...

Currently logged in

No registered users online

Login to MHM

Log in to add comments, forum posts, links, events and articles. Registration is free.

Search this site

Reproducing content

Creative Commons License
Creative Commons License.

MHM Admin
Click here to see the profile of this user
 
Click here to see the profile of this user
Kidnap of three Sri Lankan journalists - 2007/02/07 05:25 Kidnap of three journalists with trade union monthly

Reporters Without Borders urged President Mahinda Rajapaksa to give unequivocal orders for three journalists and trade union activists, kidnapped in Colombo on 5 February, to be found and released unharmed.

The three, all working for the trade union monthly Akuna (The Thunder), linked to the train drivers union, were all snatched in the space of six hours from different locations in the capital.

Nihal Serasinghe, formerly of the extreme-left monthly Diyesa and a contributor to Akuna, was abducted near the Fort in Colombo as he left a printing office.

Lalith Seneviratne, a former journalist on the far-left Hiru, in charge of page layout at Akuna, was seized at his home by men whom his wife identified as plain-clothes police officers from the Criminal Investigation Department (CID). She made a complaint at a police station in Aturugiriya.

Editor of Akuna, Sisira Priyankara, 38, was snatched at his workplace, a rail company electricians’ workshop. He was recently involved in complaints made to courts by trade unionists against salary hikes granted to minister and the president.

"Any journalist, trade unionist, human rights activist or politician who backs a peaceful solution to the conflict, has become a potential target for these well-organised groups of kidnappers who infest the north, the northeast and also the capital," the worldwide press freedom organisation said.

"Since the murder of Tamil journalist Dharmaratnam Sivaram in Colombo in 2005, it has been clear that these death squads can strike at will wherever and whenever they want. We urge the head of state to mobilise the security forces to find and free these three journalists as quickly as possible".

The kidnappings came just after dozens of countries meeting on 6 February in Paris had just signed the International Convention for the Protection of All Persons from Enforced Disappearance, adopted by Sri Lanka.

The Free media Movement (FMM) held a demonstration in Colombo on 6 February in protest against the kidnappings.

This triple kidnapping comes a few weeks after a group of militants headed by Mervyn Silva, deputy minister of labour, attacked a pacifist meeting in the Colombo suburbs, inciting his supporters to beat the participants. Journalists, including a BBC correspondent covering the meeting, were among those assaulted.
  | | The administrator has disabled public write access.

Your banner can appear here free of charge

Advertisement
Joomla Template by Joomlashack                ~
Joomla Templates by JoomlaShack Joomla Templates