The International
Federation of Journalists (IFJ) joins its Sri Lankan
affiliates in expressing outrage at a brutal attack on Gnanasundaram
Kuhanathan, news editor of the Tamil daily Uthayan,
in the northern city of Jaffna
on July 29.
According to reports received from Sri Lanka,
Kuhanathan, 59, was left for dead after being attacked with iron rods by two
unidentified men while on his way home in the evening. He was discovered in a
critical condition by passers-by and taken to Jaffna General Hospital
where he is on life-support.
“The IFJ is shocked at the viciousness
of the attack on Gnanasundaram Kuhanathan, which extends a long sequence of
targeted attacks on Uthayan,” IFJ Asia-Pacific said.
On May 28, S. Kavitharan, a reporter
with Uthayan, was attacked in Jaffna city in a similar manner
while on his way to work. No investigations have since been conducted.
In January 2006, S.S. Sukirtharajan,
a reporter for the newspaper in Trincomalee in the eastern province, was shot
dead in evident retribution for his role in exposing the execution-style
killing of five Tamil students by Sri Lankan
armed forces.
In May the same year, an armed
attack on the Uthayan premises in Jaffna may have been
intended to target Kuhanathan. Two other employees were killed.
Later that month, a delivery van
belonging to the newspaper was attacked and its driver killed.
In April 2007, S. Rajeevarman, an Uthayan reporter in Jaffna,
was shot dead after publishing news reports on disappearances in the northern province.
“The attack on Kuhanathan is part of
a pattern of seeking to suppress a newspaper which has sought consistently to
provide a voice for Sri Lanka’s
Tamil minority, and is an important part of the life of the Tamil community in Sri Lanka’s
north,” IFJ Asia-Pacific said.
In recent elections to local town
councils in the northern province,
the Tamil National Alliance (TNA), which strongly opposes the ruling coalition
of President Mahinda Rajapakse, won 18 of 23 councils.
“Uthayan’s
editorial policy in backing the TNA appears to be the direct provocation for this
near lethal attack on its senior news editor,” IFJ
Asia-Pacific said.
For further
information contact IFJ Asia-Pacific
on +91-9810518009
The IFJ
represents more than 600,000 journalists in 131 countries
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