COLOMBO (AFP) — A Sri Lanka media rights group on Friday condemned the abduction and assault of a senior journalist, alleging it was motivated by his criticism of the government's war against Tamil Tiger rebels.
Keith Noyahr, a deputy editor and defence analyst with the English-language weekly The Nation, was abducted Thursday night, severely beaten and dropped off near his residence early Friday, the Free Media Movement (FMM) said.
"There is no other reason for this latest attack against a journalist than his independent writing and analysis of the war in the North, if that is reason at all," the media rights group said.
Noyahr had been critical of high-ranking military officers and the government's approach to and conduct of the war, the FMM said.
"This is not just a violation of the freedom of expression and another significant blow to media freedom.
"It proves, as if more proof was needed, that Sri Lanka is very far from a country that protects fundamental rights," the rights group said, implying that it believed the Sri Lankan state was behind the abduction.
Police spokesman N. K. Ilangakoon said three special police teams had been deployed to probe Noyahr's abduction and that no eyewitnesses have come forward to help the investigation.
The defence ministry accused the FMM of "exploiting" Noyhar's case and labelled the rights group as "anti-Sri Lankan propagandists" for implying that security forces were involved.
"No evidence has been found so far to prove such a tendentious allegation," the ministry said.
The abduction came the day after Sri Lanka was defeated in its bid to be elected to the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva, a major diplomatic blow to the island's hawkish government.
The administration pulled out of a Norwegian-brokered truce with the Tamil Tigers in January, and has since claimed battlefield gains and massive rebel casualties.
Earlier this month, Sri Lanka's powerful defence secretary termed as "traitors" any journalists who published reports seen as "harmful towards the security forces," and said the press needed to be "reigned in."
Journalists are barred from visiting front line or rebel-held areas.
Media rights watchdogs have described Sri Lanka as one of the most dangerous places in the world for journalists after Iraq.
At least 10 media workers have been killed over the past two years, while others have been abducted, tortured or illegally detained, Amnesty International said in a report this year.
Most of the victims are Tamil journalists working in the island's embattled north and east. Sinhalese journalists working in the south face intimidation, particularly when reporting cases of graft, Amnesty said.
The rights group said those responsible were not punished by the government.
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