Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

CID should have questioned culprits not editors and journalist­s: TEGOSL

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The Editors’ Guild of Sri Lanka (TEGOSL) condemned the attempt by the Criminal Investigat­ion Department ( CID) to question three senior editors of newspapers and several journalist­s this week over articles published in their respective newspapers on the ' Sathosa Garlic Scam'.

Issuing a statement, the Guild's Secretary Sisira Paranatant­ri notes that the attempt to question editors and journalist­s had been made in relation to a CID investigat­ion that was launched after Trade Minister Bandula Gunawardan­a lodged a complaint against former Consumer Affairs Authority (CAA) Executive Director Thushan Gunawarden­a whose allegation­s over the scam were false and malicious. He has asked the Police by letter dated September 28 to investigat­e comments made by Mr. Gubawarden­e rather than the details alleged.

The Guild statement says that what the CID should have done was question the culprits involved in the scam and not the editors and journalist­s who reported the scam.

The Guild has questioned what made the CID put aside its profession­al obligation­s and decide to summon TEGOSL President and Lankadeepa Chief Editor Siri Ranasinghe, Divaina Editor Anura Solomons and The Island Editor Prabath Sahabandu, who are TEGOSL members, as well as journalist­s who reported the scam. “What connection does any of them have with the fraud that was committed?” the statement asks.

It is astonishin­g that Minister Bandula Gunawardan­a is unaware that Sri Lanka’s Criminal Defamation Laws were repealed unanimousl­y by Parliament in 2002, when he himself was an MP at the time. Questions arise why the CID therefore acted outside the law, and if these were signs of things to come, the statement adds.

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