Sri Lanka blocks two more websites critical of government: Rights group
Sri Lanka blocked two more news websites critical of the government,
media rights groups said on Wednesday, a move press groups see as
intended to intimidate critics of President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s
administration.
Media rights groups said the blocking of www.
srilankamirror.com and www.theindependent.lk violated basic rights guaranteed by the constitution. The government has already blocked at least eight news websites.
srilankamirror.com and www.theindependent.lk violated basic rights guaranteed by the constitution. The government has already blocked at least eight news websites.
“We had news items criticising the government that would have been
the reason for blocking our site,” said Subash Jayawardene, editor of
the www.theindependent.lk.
Sri Lankan authorities initially blocked news websites during and
after the final phase of a 26-year war against separatists Tamil Tiger
rebels, banning the rebels’ main website in 2008.
The government is under heavy pressure to address rights issues and
ensure media freedom after a U.S.-backed United Nations resolution was
passed in March urging the country to prosecute war criminals.
“Our stories were credible and reported with responsibility. But the
government may not have liked the stories we published,” Kalum
Shivantha, editor of the www.srilankamirror.com, told Reuters.
The websites were blocked by the state-run Telecommunication Regulatory Commission of Sri Lanka, which is overseen by Rajapaksa.
Officials at the commission were not immediately available for comment.
Media rights groups say least 14 Sri Lankan media workers have been
killed since the beginning of 2006 and several media institutions have
been attacked, but no one has been prosecuted.
Many media institutions are controlled indirectly by government proxies, media rights groups say.
In 2012 police raided and closed two news websites including
www.srilankamirror.com, arresting nine people including eight
journalists on charges of defaming Rajapaksa and reporting news in an
“incorrect and vulgar manner”. They were later released but their
computers were confiscated.
Sri Lanka is ranked 165th out of 180 countries in the 2014 Reporters Without Borders press freedom index.
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