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Sri Lankan president demands media toes the line on the war
By K. Ratnayake
19 August 2006
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Sri Lankan president Mahinda Rajapakse held a meeting with
editors and heads of media bodies on Wednesday ostensibly to explain
the current situation in the country. The real purpose
of the meeting was to pressure those assembled to faithfully reproduce
the governments propaganda on its widening war against the
Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).
The fact that the meeting was called at all reveals a distinct
nervousness. The media in Sri Lanka is already toeing the line.
Virtually all reports of the war are based directly on government
speeches and military statements. There is little first-hand reporting
from the war zones and no opposition to the war in the editorials
and commentary.
Yet some coverage of the militarys atrocities and its
indiscriminate attacks on civilians has inevitably slipped into
the Colombo and international media, not simply from pro-LTTE
reports but the Sri Lankan Monitoring Mission (SLMM) and various
non-government organisations. As a result, there have been concerns
expressed in military circles about losing the propaganda war,
and calls for the suppression of LTTE disinformation.
Appropriately, Rajapakse began his meeting with a lie, insisting
that the military was engaged purely in defensive action. There
is no war, he declared, but only retaliatory attacks
on the part of the forces in the national interest to protect
our positions. If there were a war, he said, government
forces would fight and march forward.
The army has already fought and tried to march forward. Rajapakse
initiated military action against the LTTE on July 26. In open
breach of the 2002 ceasefire agreement, he ordered the military
to retake the Mavilaru irrigation sluice gate. While the president
claimed that the operation was limited and humanitarian,
the air force bombed LTTE targets in other areas and fighting
continued even after the LTTE opened the sluice gate and provided
water to farmers downstream.
Rajapakses war for water was simply a pretext
for initiating a broader offensive to seize eastern areas where
the military calculated the LTTE was weak. Inevitably fighting
has spread to other areas. If the army is not marching forward
elsewhere, it is only because it has suffered significant setbacks
as the LTTE has probed its defences on the Jaffna peninsula.
The day after Rajapakses meeting, the military acknowledged
that 106 soldiers had died in fighting over the previous week
on the northern peninsula alone. Its warplanes have repeatedly
strafed LTTE positions in an effort to drive out its fighters.
According to UN reports, 150,000 civilians have been displaced,
including 41,000 in the north of the island. Fighting continued
yesterday.
To claim there is no war is absurd. To declare
that the military is simply engaged in defensive actions is a
gross falsification designed to obscure the governments
responsibility for plunging the island back to civil war. Rajapakses
posturing as a man of peace open to negotiations reeks
of hypocrisy and cynicism. Yet the presidents words were
dutifully repeated in all the media the following day without
a critical comment to be found anywhere.
Having set out the governments line on the war, Rajapakse
then called on the gathered media representatives to be more responsible.
I have always been a friend of the media and welcome objective
criticism, he declared, but I will not condone irresponsible
journalism that threatens national and public security.
He said he didnt like censorship, but insisted the media
had to exercise self-restraint. Rajapakse has extensive powers
under existing emergency regulations to impose media censorship.
As Rajapakse admitted, the government was already under severe
pressure to get tough with the media. People were reminding
him, he said, that previous presidents have imposed strict censorship.
According to recent press reports, several top generals complained
at a national security council meeting last month that sections
of the media were giving undue publicity to the LTTE.
The president immediately summoned those responsible and directed
them to alter their coverage.
An example of what the military regards as responsible reporting
can be seen on the official defence ministry website. Last Monday
the air force bombed a former orphanage in the LTTE-held Mullaittivu
district, killing up to 61 schoolchildren, who, according to the
LTTE, were involved in a two-day training course. SLMM officials
and representatives of the United Nations Childrens Fund
(UNICEF) visited the site and confirmed that the casualties were
mainly teenage schoolgirls. No evidence was found of military
equipment or training.
Yet the government and the military continue to insist that
they bombed an LTTE training camp and that the dead were child
soldiers. On its website, the military posted a highly
classified video, which it claims, very clearly shows
the training sessions of LTTE cadres clad in uniforms, movements
of camouflaged and other vehicles, rushing in and rushing out
to evacuate the large numbers of wounded LTTE cadres. As
anyone who watches the blurry footage can see, the statement is
ridiculous. As SLMM head Ulf Henricsson politely put it, the
video pictures we have seen are inconclusive.
Yet the military still denies the atrocity and claims that
it killed more than 300 LTTE cadres in the air strike. One particularly
sinister aspect of the website statement is that it brands all
efforts to refute its lies as the false claims of pro-LTTE
propagandists. Presumably this also applies to the evidence
provided by SLMM, UNICEF and the UN, which the statement fails
to concretely address. As far as the military is concerned, anyone
who does not accept its propaganda uncritically is in the camp
of the enemy.
The military and its allies among the various anti-LTTE militia
and Sinhala extremist groups do not limit themselves to verbal
threats and calls for tougher censorship. Physical attacks on
the media, particularly on the Tamil language press, have intensified.
On Tuesday, Sathasivam Baskaran, a distributor of the Tamil
daily Uthayan, was shot dead while distributing the newspaper
in Jaffna town during a brief one-hour relaxation of the strict
curfew. With the town under virtual martial law, the murder was
almost certainly carried out by the security forces or its allies.
Baskaran is the fourth Uthayan employee murdered this year.
On the same day, military personnel searched the Colombo offices
of Suder Oli, an associated paper of Uthayan.
There is no indication that these gross attacks on press freedom
were even discussed at Rajapakses meeting with media representatives.
The lack of any critical comment in the media following the meeting
makes clear that no one is going to step out of line.
See Also:
On-the-spot report from Sri Lanka's war-torn
Jaffna peninsula
[18 August 2006]
Sri Lankan air force bombing kills scores
of students
[15 August 2006]
War spreads to the north of Sri Lanka
[14 August 2006]
Sri Lankan government intensifies military
offensive against LTTE
[11 August 2006]
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