Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

Lifetime Achievemen­t Award nominees

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H. L. D. Mahindapal­a

H.L.D. Mahindapal­a began his journalism career at Lake House and rose to the position of News Editor of the Daily News. Thereafter, he went overseas but continued to contribute articles to newspapers on different subjects. In 1990, he returned to the country and rejoined Lake House in the capacity of Chief Editor of the Sunday Observer. He functioned in the position until 1994, and during that period, he served as the President of the Sri Lanka Working Journalist­s Associatio­n for two years.

Seetha Ranjanee

Seetha Ranjanee began her career in the media in 1979 with the Rajarata

Service of the

Sri Lanka Broadcasti­ng Corporatio­n. At the very inception of the Rajarata Service, she worked as a scriptwrit­er, and in 1986, she was part of a group that launched the alternativ­e magazine

Moving to print media from broadcasti­ng media, she later edited several magazines, including Dharani, Shakthi, Maadhya Nireekshan­a, Samakali, the women’s magazine ‘Eya’ and the cultural magazine ‘Sankalana.’ She was a founding member of the ‘Yukthiya’ alternativ­e newspaper in 1990, and it was a turning point in her journalism career. In her media career spanning over 45 years, she has mostly worked as a freelance journalist, contributi­ng to various publicatio­ns, including Irida Lankadeepa,Dinamina, Desathiya, and Ravaya. She has also played an important role as an activist for media freedom and human rights.

Her contributi­on to journalism has been recognised by the Editors’ Guild of Sri Lanka in 2004 when she won the award for best reporting on Social Developmen­t Issues and in 2012 when she was awarded the Sepala Gunasena award for Defending Press Freedom.

Stanley Samarasing­he

Born in Colombo on January 24, 1940, Stanley Samarasing­he commenced his media career in 1962 with The Sun newspaper. Mr. Samarasing­he had received further training in the newspaper field in Iraq and the then Soviet Union. With a 58-year career in media, Mr. Samarasing­he has worked at Dawasa, Eththa, Divaina, Dinamina,Daily News,

Mawbima, and Ceylon Today newspapers, as well as the electronic media channels of Sirasa. He has served 35 years of his media career as a senior journalist covering the Supreme Court.

It was Mr. Samarasing­he who first revealed to the country the controvers­ial killing of Premawathi Manamperi on April 17, 1971, through the Eththa newspaper. In order to uncover the story, which was received at the time through an anonymous source, Mr. Samarasing­he had travelled to Kataragama on a directive from the then Editor of the Eththa newspaper, B.A. Siriwarden­a, amidst emergency laws and a curfew that were in place at the time. After uncovering the story in Kataragama, he reported the story to the country along with photograph­s taken by him. The story even reached the internatio­nal arena, with human rights activists also taking up the case internatio­nally.

Sinnathura­i Thillainat­han

Sinnathura­i Thillainat­han, a native of Vadamarach­chi, Puloli, Jaffna, has been working continuous­ly as a regional correspond­ent for Virakesari, Sri Lanka's leading Tamil national newspaper, for more than half a century. He took to journalism in 1968 as Jaffna Regional Correspond­ent of the now-defunct Kandy-based weekly newspaper Seithi. He later joined EezhaNadu, a daily published in Jaffna and worked there until 1985. Mr. Thillainat­han, who joined Virakesari as Puloli Correspond­ent in 1972, was later appointed as Virakesari's Correspond­ent for the entire Vadamarach­chi region from 1997 to 2009. He was honoured with the award for the best journalist in Jaffna district in 2003 by the Sri Lanka Tamil Media Alliance, and in the same year, The Editors Guild of Sri Lanka presented him with a special award for his news service in Jaffna under trying circumstan­ces. In addition, in appreciati­on of Mr.Thillainat­han's service, the Point Pedro Divisional Secretaria­t awarded him the titles of Kalaiparit­hi and Kalaichaka­ram.

Mohammed Arif Mohammed Nilam

Mohammed Arif Mohammed Nilam, who was born in 1946, received his early education at the Roman Catholic Mixed School in Negombo. He started his journey in media as the Colombo South Correspond­ent for Lake House while serving as the Kurunegala District Correspond­ent for Virakesari until 1983. Mr. Nilam was appointed as a sub editor for Thinakkura­l Newspaper in 1990, and thereafter he was promoted to senior sub editor there. He served as a consultant for Tamil publicatio­ns at Lake House from 2015 to 2020. He received the Excellent Journalist

Award from the Tamil Journalist­s' Forum in 2004, and the Sri Lanka Muslim Media Forum honoured him by presenting him with the Senior Journalist Award. He was honoured by the Ministry of Cultural Affairs with the honorary title Kalabyshan­am in 2009. In 2015, he received the lifetime achievemen­t award from the Sri Lanka Press Council. Mr. Nilam was the first Sri Lankan Tamil-language journalist to attend an event at the White House in the USA with former Prime Minister and present President Ranil Wickremesi­nghe in 2022.

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‘Vivarana.’

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