by: anticorruption January 9, 2012
In some parts of the world speaking out against
corruption can be met with threats, intimidation and physical harm, even death.
Courageous individuals work at great personal risk to make their voices heard
in places where dissent can meet with harsh repercussions. The beginning of
January saw the brutal murder of such individual, Sri Lankan newspaper editor
Lasantha Wickramatunga.
On 8 January,
Wickramatunga was shot by unidentified gunmen on motocycles on his way to work.
He was rushed to hospital but died after three hours of emergency surgery.
Wickramatunga
received “numerous death threats through his career and was detained on several
occasions because of the controversial nature of his stories,” notes the BBC.
The Sunday Leader newspaper is renowned for being critical of the government,
and Wickramatunga, a qualified lawyer, had often “often fought defamation cases
brought by senior politicians,” reports AFP. In 1998 gunmen shot at his home
and the paper’s printing presses have come under repeated arson attacks.
“Lasantha was a
symbol of dissent whose motto was “unbowed and unafraid”. His life was full of
challenges all revolving around exposing of corruption. Many took to
investigative journalism due to his leadership and guidance. When the media was
attacked with impunity, he stood strong exposing those responsible. His death
has exposed the danger of being a corruption fighter but, let us hope,
thousands of Sri Lankans will come forward to stand by his motto,” said J.C.
Weliamuna, Executive Director of TI Sri Lanka.
Hundreds of Sri
Lankan journalists took to the streets of Colombo to protest Wickramatunga’s
murder and the suppression of the media. The US, European Union, India and the
World Bank also joined in condemning the shooting as “the government came under
local and foreign pressure to protect freedom of expression,” writes AFP.
Wickramatunga had
been highly critical of the government’s policy and the war with the Tamil
Tigers. In final editorial, he wrote, “ Winning the war? Then there must be elections
around the corner. It is no secret that the war has become Sri Lankan President
Mahinda Rajapakse’s recipe for electoral success.”
Rajapakse has
publicly condemned the killing and ordered a police investigation into the
murder. “The heinous crime points to the grave dangers faced by the democratic
social order of our country, and the existence of forces that will go to the
furthest extremes in using terror and criminality to damage our social fabric
and bring disrepute to the country,” said Rajapakse in a statement.
However, Amnesty’s
Sri Lankan country specialist questions the likelihood of the perpetrators
being brought to justice. “At least 14 journalists or other media workers have
been killed in Sri Lanka over the past three years. More than 20 journalists
have left the country due to death threats...the police have yet to find the
killers of any of the murdered journalists,” he writes.
Journalists face
murder, harassment, abduction and arbitrary detention in Sri Lanka,” reports
Reuters. Sri lanka was ranked 165th out of 173 countries in media rights group
Reporters Without Border’s 2008 Press Freedom Index – the lowest ranking of any
democratic country. The group criticised Rajapaksa and the government media
saying they had, “incited hatred against him and allowed an outrageous level of
impunity to develop as regards violence against the press.”
The murder of
Wickramatunga is more tragic example of a worrying pattern of violence and
intimidation against the media and society in Sri Lanka. In September 2008, the
home of TI Sri Lanka’s Executive Director J.C. Weliamuna came under a grenade
attack, which has yet to be fully investigated, and the MTV/MBC television
studios near Colombo were stormed by 15 masked gunmen on 6 January.
In 2000,
Wickramatunga was awarded Transparency International’s first Integrity Award to
underscore his commitment to unearthing corruption and in recognition of the
difficult and dangerous circumtances he faced as The Sunday Leader editor.
“Lasantha Wickramatunga’s assassination is a grim reminder to us all that some
activists still have to pay the highest of prices for their dogged pursuit of
accountability and transparency. I feel privileged to have met Lasantha
Wickramatunga and I hope that his memory will stand as a symbol of perseverance
aand courage for all anti-corruption activists,” said Susan Côté-Freeman, who
handled TI’s 2000 Integrity Awards programme and is now TI’s Private Sector
Programme Manager.
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