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16 April 2024

Armed men hold Lankan editor at knifepoint

Published
By Agencies

Five armed men held a Sri Lankan newspaper editor at knifepoint as they searched her home on Saturday before police burst in and shot one of the intruders dead, officials said.

The attack was the latest in a string of violent incidents involving the staff of the Sunday Leader and media activists said they suspected the incident at the Colombo home of Associate Editor Mandana Ismail Abeywickrema was an attempt to intimidate her.

Police spokesman Buddhika Siriwardena said three officers were injured when the intruders attacked them with knives. "One intruder was shot dead and the other four have been arrested," he said.

Police described the pre-dawn intrusion as an attempted armed robbery but the island's main press freedom organisation, the Free Media Movement (FMM), said they suspected the attack was linked to her work.

"The intruders spent a lot of time inside the house going through files and documents," FMM convenor Sunil Jayasekera told AFP.
"If they wanted only the valuables, they could have taken them and got out much earlier. But they were clearly looking for something else."

In 2009, the Sunday Leader's editor, Lasantha Wickrematunge, was shot dead near his office just outside the capital.
Six months ago, gunmen shot and wounded another of the paper's journalists at his home near Colombo.

In September, the newspaper's new owner dismissed the editor, Frederica Jansz.
She has since fled to Canada saying she received death threats.

The latest incident came a day ahead of a fact-finding mission to the island by the UN's human rights chief Navi Pillay.

Media rights groups have said Sri Lanka remains a dangerous place for journalists despite the end of a decades-long war between the military and Tamil separatist rebels in 2009 and that attacks against journalists and news outlets have continued.
Sri Lanka lifted a state of emergency in 2011, but media activists say journalists have been forced to self-censor their work due to fear of attacks.