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Lanka
Gunmen kill prominent Tamil journalist in Sri Lanka
By Nanda Wickremasinghe
6 May 2005
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The funeral of Dharmaratnam Sivaram, a well-known journalist
who was murdered in Colombo last week, took place in eastern Batticaloa
on Monday. Sivaram was a senior editorial board member of Tamilnet,
a pro-Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) web site, and a
writer on Tamil issues in the Daily Mirror, a Sri Lankan
daily. His murder, which was clearly politically motivated, has
heightened communal tensions in the country.
Sivaram, 46, was abducted at about 10:30 p.m. on April 28 at
Bambalapitiya in the Sri Lankan capital Colombo. Two and a half
hours later his body was found on the citys outskirts, about
500 metres from the countrys parliamentary precincts in
Sri Jayawardenepura. Forensic expert Jeanne Perera, who conducted
the post-mortem, reported that Sivaram had been hit on the back
of the head and shoulders and shot at pointblank range.
Eyewitnesses told police and the media that two people had
hung around the restaurant where Sivaram had been meeting with
others. As he was leaving, a silver-grey intercooler vehicle drove
up beside him and two men bundled him inside. All of this took
place close to the Bambalapitiya police station. His body was
dumped inside a high security zone, which is subject to frequent
police patrols.
Sivarams wife Yogaranjani Dharmaratnam lodged a complaint
at the Bambalapitiya police at 1 a.m. after receiving an anonymous
telephone call that her husband had been abducted. The body was
found at about the same time. The police have appointed two investigative
teams, but have announced no breakthroughs.
Sri Lankan media and journalist associations, including the
Free Media Movement (FMM), along with the Committee for Protection
of Journalists (CPJ) and Reporters sans Frontiers (RSF) have condemned
the murder as an attack on press freedom. On Tuesday, journalists
took part in a picket near Fort railway station in central Colombo
to protest against the killing.
There are plenty of suspects in the case. Various Sinhala extremist
organisations and the security forces themselves regard anyone
openly sympathetic to the LTTE as a legitimate target. In the
course of the countrys 20-year civil war thousands of Tamils
have been arbitrarily detained as LTTE suspects held
without trial and in some cases tortured. Elements of the police
and military along with associated paramilitary groups and chauvinist
gangs have been involved in abductions and murders. The manner
in which Sivaram was seized and killed indicates planning and
experiencea professional job.
Even the notoriously biased Colombo press was compelled to
acknowledge obliquely that the Sri Lankan security forces may
have been involved. An editorial in the Daily Mirror on
Monday stated: All we can say is that if the dastardly act
had any kind of acquiescence of a state organ, we like to remind
them that no one can pardon anyone in the pay of the state descending
to the level of a terrorist organisation like the LTTE in killing
a messenger.
Sivaram had been harassed by the police and unidentified gangs
several times. He was arrested in 1996 under the countrys
draconian emergency laws but the police had to release him for
lack of evidence. In June 2001, an unknown gang tried to break
into his house. Significantly, the break-in was preceded by two
articlesin the Sinhala racialist Divayina and the
state-owned Thinakaranbranding him as a Tigerthat
is, a LTTE member. Last May, police raided his house while he
was absent and searched for explosives and any other evidence
to incriminate him. They found nothing.
Sivarams murder comes amid an escalating communal campaign
by Sinhala extremist groups against attempts to restart stalled
peace talks. Those involved include the Janatha Vimukthi Peramuna
(JVP), a key component of the ruling United Peoples Freedom Alliance
(UPFA), and the Jathika Hela Urumaya (JHU), which is led by right-wing
Buddhist monks. Sivarams criticism of these groups made
him a particular target for vilification.
The JVP and JHU are targeting President Chandrika Kumaratungas
attempts to establish a joint mechanism with the LTTE to distribute
tsunami aid. Both parties declare that such a mechanism grants
legitimacy to the LTTE and paves the way for the LTTE to establish
a separate Tamil state. In reality, the JVP and JHU regard any
concession to the LTTE as tantamount to treason and are deeply
hostile to the entire peace process.
At a recent meeting organised by the Patriotic National Movement
(PNM), a JVP-front organisation, speakers branded various non-government
organisations (NGOs) as hired agents of Western countries
and some as traitors who support the LTTE. Sivaram
was specifically denounced as a Tiger.
A rabid JHU statement saluted last weeks murder, declaring:
The death of Sivaram is a warning to all extremists....
The fate of the editor of the Tamilnet is a warning example
to all those who oppose the country in the future. It concluded
with a call to arms, appealing to the government to remove
all obstacles on the path of armed forces and other services to
exercise maximum force to act in defence of the country.
Whoever carried out the crime, Sivarams murder was clearly
aimed at stoking up communal conflict and provoking a response
by the LTTE. An April 30 LTTE statement declared: Sri Lankan
military intelligence and para-militaries collaborating with the
security forces are responsible for the murder. It conferred
the title of Maamanithar on Sivaram, both as a mark
of respect and a warning that the LTTE does not take his killing
lightly.
In the east of the island, the February 2002 ceasefire agreement
is already a virtual dead letter. Clashes between the LTTE and
a breakaway faction headed by V. Muralitharan or Karuna are continuing.
The Karuna faction has the backing of sections of the armed forces,
which are hostile to the so-called peace process. Both sides have
been involved in assassinations and ambushes, raising the real
danger of a return to full-scale civil war.
The UPFA government is under pressure from the major powers
and business to press ahead with peace talks. Last week it issued
a statement condemning Sivarams murder. But the coalition
is deeply divided and efforts to form a joint tsunami relief body
have stalled for months because of the JVPs opposition.
Kumaratungas own Sri Lanka Freedom Party is just as mired
in Sinhala chauvinism as the JVP is, and therefore hesitant to
lose the support of its ally.
In this political climate, it is highly unlikely that the police
will track down and prosecute those who planned and executed Sivarams
murder.
See Also:
A spate of police killings
in Sri Lanka
[28 April 2005]
Sri Lankan chauvinists stir
up tensions in tsunami-affected East
[7 April 2005]
Sharpening tensions in Sri
Lankan government over talks with LTTE
[9 March 2005]
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