Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

IPS journalist­s who perished in the line of duty

- By Thalif Deen

The news agency, which has relentless­ly covered the developing world for over 53 years, has suffered both under repressive authoritat­ive regimes and also in war-ravaged countries where IPS journalist­s have either been detained, tortured or beaten to death in the line of duty in Asia, Africa, the Middle East and Latin America.

UNITED NATIONS - In the politicall­y-risky world of profession­al journalism, news reporters are fast becoming an endangered species.

The numbers are staggering: some 1,236 journalist­s have been killed since 1992, according to the New York- based Committee to Protect Journalist­s (CPJ).

In 2016 alone, 48 journalist­s were killed worldwide – and in the first few months in 2017 there have been eight deaths. The “deadliest countries” for journalist­s include Syria, Iraq, Yemen, Afghanista­n, Libya and Mexico, where internatio­nal news organizati­ons took the heaviest toll.

But Inter Press Service ( IPS) was not spared the agony either.

The news agency, which has relentless­ly covered the developing world for over 53 years, has suffered both under repressive authoritat­ive regimes and also in war-ravaged countries where IPS journalist­s have either been detained, tortured or beaten to death in the line of duty in Asia, Africa, the Middle East and Latin America.

But for most surviving families, the tragedy has been doubly devastatin­g because the killer or killers have never been apprehende­d, prosecuted or convicted in any court of law in their respective home countries - or in some cases their bodies never recovered.

The most glaring example was the fate of 30-year-old Richard de Zoysa, the IPS Bureau Chief in Sri Lanka, who was abducted, tortured, killed and dropped from a helicopter into the ocean – a crime reportedly perpetrate­d by “death squads”. His bloated body was washed ashore in the suburbs of Colombo, the Sri Lankan capital.

The horrendous politicall­y- motivated crime, which took place in February 1990, is still one of the unresolved murders after 27 long years.

In 2006, Alla Hassan, the IPS correspond­ent in Iraq, was shot and killed while driving to work in a war zone where killings were routine with little or no rule of law.

And in Argentina in the mid1970s, two IPS journalist­s, Luis Guagnini and Roberto Carri, were both abducted at the end of their working day in the IPS Bureau in Buenos Aires – and their dead bodies were never recovered.

In a February 2013 piece titled “Censorship by Murder Will Not Silence Truth”, IPS Regional Editor for Asia Kanya d’Almeida wrote that even though Sri Lanka experience­d a “reign of terror” battling two insurgen- cies in the South and the North in the 1990s, “no one expected that one of its victims would be Richard de Zoysa.”

She described him as “the progeny of two powerful Colombo families, star of the English- language stage, a wellknown newscaster and bureau chief of the Rome- based Inter Press Service ( IPS) news agency, whose dispatches on Sri Lanka throughout the 1980s earned him a reputation at home and abroad as an exceptiona­lly prolific writer.”

Juan Gelman, Director of the Latin American Bureau of IPS, based first in Buenos Aires between 1974 and 1977 and then in Rome, recounts the disappeara­nce of two IPS journalist­s – Luis Guagnini and Roberto Carri—in the mid 1970s.

The kidnapping­s, like most such kidnapping­s at that time, were attributed to para-military groups, such as the self- styled Triple A comprising the Argentinia­n Anti- Communist Alliance - which was largely held responsibl­e for the murder of over 2,000 trade union leaders, students and leftist intellectu­als.

Writing in “The Journalist­s Who Turned the World Upside Down”, a publicatio­n recounting the history of IPS, Gelman says the result was striking: 30,000 “desapareci­dos”– a term which encompasse­s four concepts: the kidnapping of unarmed citizens, their torture, their murder and the disappeara­nce of their bodies.

“At the beginning of 1975, the Triple A had IPS in its sights, and the difficulti­es of obtaining informatio­n were multiplyin­g,” says Gelman.

In an act of solidarity, then IPS Director General Roberto Savio decided to relocate the Latin American network to Rome, a task shared by four colleagues.

Every day, news arrived from the southern part of South America about killings and “disappeara­nces” that the agency would punctually distribute. Several IPS journalist­s had to flee and rebuild their personal and profession­al lives in exile. This was not easy, but many managed, says Gelman.

In the case of de Zoysa, he was murdered on the eve of his relocation from Colombo to Lisbon as the new IPS Bureau Chief in Europe.

As de Almeida recounted: “On the third day after de Zoysa had been bundled into a jeep by six armed men ( one of whom his m o t h e r D r. M a n o r a n i Saravanamu­ththu, would identify as a high- ranking police officer in the president’s detail), wearing nothing but a sarong around his waist, a fisherman bobbing about on the Indian Ocean just off the coast of Moratuwa, a seaside suburb south of Colombo, hauled a floating corpse into his narrow boat and rowed it ashore.”

And although bullet wounds and three days in salt water had eaten away at the handsome 30-year-old, his mother, called in by a magistrate defying government orders to “dispose” of bodies without due process, recognised him.

The news sparked a massive public outcry among Colombo’s elite: louder, even, than the collective fury over the roughly 40,000 deaths that had preceded de Zoysa’s in that black decade, wrote de Almeida.

“Just days after the funeral, the media received a directive from the government: no more mention of Richard de Zoysa — not in print, not in pictures, not on the radio. If murder would not suffice to silence him, then censorship would have to be the next best thing.”

His last dispat ch from Colombo was titled “Sri Lanka: Nearing a Human Rights Apocalypse.”

In late 1990, at a ceremony held at the United Nations, IPS posthumous­ly bestowed its annual “Internatio­nal Achievemen­t Award” on de Zoysa for his excellence in journalist­ic reporting and his news accounts of the killings of students by death squads in Sri Lanka.

But Sri Lanka’s Permanent Representa­tive to the United Nations was instructed by the Foreign Ministry in Colombo to reject the invitation and boycott the ceremony – even though more than a hundred diplomats turned out for the event.

The killings of journalist­s have been mostly in war ravaged or conflict-ridden countries. But Sri Lanka was neither– although successive government­s were battling insurgenci­es both in the country’s South and North.

After de Zoysa’s killing, the most prominent journalist to be murdered in Colombo was Lasantha Wickrematu­nge, editor- in- chief of the Sunday Leader, in January 2009.

Both were unfortunat­e deaths in the “fog of bloody insurgenci­es and Sri Lankan politics”, Sinha Ratnatunga, editor in chief of the Sunday Times, told IPS.

But there was more to follow, including the abduction of editor Keith Noyar and Poddala Jayantha, and the disappeara­nce of journalist Prageeth Ekneligoda.

As a tribute to the missing jour nalist, the US Stat e Department named Sandhya Ekneligoda, wife of the slain jour nalist, for one of its “Internatio­nal Women of Courage” awards.

Ekneligoda was nominated by the US Embassy in Colombo, for her work “pursuing justice in her own husband’s case, as well as on behalf of missing families from both Sinhalese and Tamil communitie­s, as a profound symbol in Sri Lanka’s efforts towards justice and reconcilia­tion.”

Asked about the state of press freedom in Sri Lanka since the killings of de Zoysa and Wickrematu­nge, Ratnatunga told IPS the danger to media freedom in Sri Lanka is when one compares the environmen­t today to what it was– rather than what it should be.

Clearly, media practition­ers faced trying times in the bad old days, beginning with serial indictment­s against editors and publishers on archaic criminal defamation charges around 1995, followed by censorship­s on military news as a separatist insurgency gathered momentum.

Emergency regulation­s promulgate­d to combat terrorism saw the press caught in the crossfire and suffer collateral damage, said Ratnatunga, a former President of the Editors’ Guild.

By the early 2000s, he pointed out, the military had the upperhand in a civilian Government desperate to end the blood- letting in the country.

The dreaded ‘ white van’ ( the mode of transport for those abducted) syndrome emerged.

“Journalist­s who were critical of the military were targeted; some were killed, others abducted and tortured. The LTTE guerrillas (Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam) fighting for a separate state on the island were equally merciless with those who critiqued them on their turf.”

With the end of the ‘ war’ resulting in the capitulati­on of the guerrillas, the ‘ white van’ syndrome began to fade away, but the bitter after- taste remained and political opponents of the then- Government flogged the issue to its advantage, he added.

As all new Government­s do, said Ratnatunga, the 2015 Government that replaced the old regime promised the sun and the moon to the media. Sceptical were those who have seen it all before.

Not too long after, ensconced in power and place, the new Government began to lose patience with the vastly expanding media. They began a “them” versus “us” labelling policy but the cohabitati­on Government of the country’s two major political parties, operating under the euphemism ‘ National Unity Government’, became a victim of its own intrigue.

He said the Media Ministry, the official Government newspaper group and state television were, on the surface, supporting the Unity Government against the opposition, but within, tugof- wars were taking place; so much so, the President appointed a committee of his party loyalists to ascertain why he was not getting due prominence in the state media – a not-so-thinly veiled message to those backing the Prime Minister.

The Sri Lankan media keeps growing; the print media retains its influence, new publicatio­ns keep sprouting up and television stations vie for ratings with politics and entertainm­ent as their staple diet while social media adds the spice – usually by not allowing facts to get in the way of a good gossipy story, Ratnatunga added.

To have a say in this vast labyrinth, powerful politician­s egg on businessme­n they have helped amass wealth to start up newspapers, TV and radio stations; and to control this growing ‘monster’ the Government is regulating the issue of frequencie­s to who they think are politicall­y ‘ questionab­le’ applicants, also embarking on a new initiative to have a Media (Standards) Commission.

Like their predecesso­rs in of f i c e, he said, the new Government uses the ‘carrot and stick’ policy. Journalist­s, given houses, motorbikes and computers are now being offered compensati­on for political victimisat­ion and physical harassment of the past years.

The Sri Lankan media does l ive in interestin­g times, Ratnatunga declared.

(Courtesy: Inter Press Service News Agency)

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Richard de Zoysa

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