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Investigate killing of prominent journalist
The killing of a prominent newspaper editor today
and the bombing of a private television station
on January 6, 2009, highlight the Sri Lankan government's
failure to stop violence against the media, Human
Rights Watch and the International Commission
of Jurists (ICJ) said. The groups said that past
investigations into attacks on journalists have
led nowhere, and that the government should act
quickly to bring the perpetrators of the attacks
to justice.
Unidentified
armed men in close proximity to a security forces
checkpoint shot Sunday Leader newspaper editor
Lasantha Wickremetunga, a senior journalist acclaimed
for his investigative reporting, during his morning
drive to work in Colombo today. He died shortly
after. On January 6, a dozen heavily armed men
badly damaged the studios of the private Maharaja
Television station on the outskirts of Colombo
by detonating Claymore landmines and grenades.
"The fact that these attacks were carried
out in broad daylight against vocal critics of
the government without any arrests or law enforcement
action adds to the climate of impunity in Sri
Lanka," said Roger Normand, Asia-Pacific
Director at the ICJ. "The government must
not only condemn these heinous acts, but take
effective measures to bring the perpetrators to
justice."
Wickremetunga's in-depth investigations into
corruption and nepotism in the Sri Lankan government
frequently made him the target of intimidation
attempts and lawsuits. Maharaja Television came
under attack after state media labeled it "unpatriotic"
for its coverage of the government's recent military
campaigns in the war with the separatist Liberation
Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE). On January 2, 2009,
government forces captured the LTTE administrative
center in the northern Vanni area.
"Sri Lanka prides itself as a functioning
democracy. Yet media freedom, a vital pillar of
democracy, has increasingly come under attack,"
said Brad Adams, Asia director at Human Rights
Watch. "The government should not take its
recent military victories as a signal that it
can stifle dissent."
The freedom to express views opposing those held
by the government has come under severe threat
in Sri Lanka. A prominent ethnic Tamil journalist,
J.S. Tissainayagam, a Tamil publisher, N. Jasiharan,
and his wife, V. Valamathy, were arbitrarily arrested
in March 2008 and six months later charged under
the state terrorism laws. These cases have raised
serious due process concerns.
On September 27, 2008, unknown assailants flung
a grenade into the home of J. C. Weliamuna, a
lawyer who is executive director of Transparency
International Sri Lanka, an anticorruption group.
Weliamuna is counsel in several fundamental rights
cases involving torture, extrajudicial killings,
and enforced disappearances. So far, no one has
been arrested for this attack.
Impunity for human rights violations remains
a disturbing norm in Sri Lanka. The government's
unwillingness to hold accountable those responsible
for serious violations has fostered an environment
in which journalists have come under increased
attack. In its 2008 press freedom index, the media
group Reporters Sans Frontiers (Reports without
borders) ranked Sri Lanka 165 out of 173 countries.
Article 14 of the Sri Lankan constitution provides
for freedom of speech. The rights to freedom of
opinion and expression are protected under article
19 of the International Covenant on Civil and
Political Rights, to which Sri Lanka is a party.
However, since 2006 the government of President
Mahinda Rajapakse has increasingly intimidated
and tried to silence the media, nongovernmental
organizations, and others with independent or
dissenting views with regard to the government's
military policies and human rights practices.
Senior government officials have attacked such
critics, calling them supporters of the separatists
and traitors.
"The Sri Lankan government should ensure
that perpetrators of rights abuses are brought
to justice," said Adams. "For too many
years and in too many cases, those who commit
violence have gone unpunished while those who
dared to speak have paid with their lives. This
culture of impunity has to end now."
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Billionaire blowups’
list
INDUSTRIALIST Anil Ambani continues to be on
the focus of US magazine Forbes but this time
around for topping the list of 'Billionaire Blowups
of 2008' by virtue of turning the biggest loser
of wealth in less than a year of being touted
as the biggest gainer in the world.
According
to Press Trust of India, “Besides ranking
Anil as the sixth richest person in the world
with a net worth of $42 billion, Forbes had credited
him for having added maximum wealth in its last
annual rankings in March 2008. Since then, his
net worth has declined to $12 billion, the magazine
said in a news report titled ‘Billionaire
Blowups of 2008’.
The biggest loser of all was Anil Ambani. Touted
on the cover of our 2008 billionaires issue for
having added $24 billion to his fortune in one
year, Ambani has dropped $30 billion since then.
It further added that three of “his fellow
countrymen -estranged brother Mukesh, steel tycoon
Lakshmi Mittal and KP Singh of DLF, all of whom
ranked earlier among the world’s 10 richest
- lost more than $20 billion apiece.”
Noting that 2008 was “a dreadful year
for the world’s wealthiest as markets and
currencies around the world tumbled,” Forbes
said over 300 of the 1,125 billionaires have lost
at least $1 billion since March.
While several dozen have lost more than $5 billion,
the 10 richest from annual 2008 rankings have
lost about $150 billion.
“Stock of his telecom company dropped
after his estranged brother helped scuttle a deal
with African telecom MTN.” Forbes, however,
noted that with $12 billion worth of fortune,
Anil Ambani “remains quite wealthy... That
is something many others can’t claim”.
The list of 10 billionaire blowups includes
two more Indians - wind power major Suzlon’s
chief Tulsi Tanti and online gambling firm PartyGaming’s
founder Anurag Dikshit.
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