BBC: UNP says Fonseka was 'behind attacks'

JothiPerera

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Nov 27, 2009
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:shocked:

http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/7496367.stm

Sri Lanka's main opposition party has accused the country's most senior army officer of being behind violent attacks on reporters.
Opposition MP Joseph Michael Perera told parliament that the attacks were carried out by a "special team" controlled by Lt Gen Sarath Fonseka.
Mr Perera said the government should arrest the offenders and "immediately bring them to justice".
The army has denied that it is any way involved in attacks on journalists.
'Dangerous'
"We are told by those in the army itself that journalists are abducted and subjected to grievous injury by none other than a special unit under the army commander," Mr Perera, a former parliamentary speaker, said.
The World Association of Newspapers recently ranked Sri Lanka as the third most dangerous country in the world for media workers in 2007.


The state is involved in a series of intimidations, abductions and killings of media persons
Joseph Michael Perera

Sri Lanka's journalists under fire
But army spokesman Brig Udaya Nanayakkara said that the MP had nothing to substantiate his allegations.
"We have nothing to do with the attacks against journalists," he said. "If the MP has evidence, he must present it to the police."
The BBC's Roland Buerk says that there have been a series of abductions and assaults against journalists in Sri Lanka.
Our correspondent says that no-one has been brought to court for the attacks and there are accusations the government has been turning a blind eye, if not encouraging them.
Twelve journalists have been killed in Sri Lanka since August 2005, 11 of them in government-controlled areas.
In one of the most controversial incidents, a journalist and a senior official of the British High Commission were assaulted last week just days after the government set up a cabinet-level panel to prevent attacks on media personnel.
Lt Gen Fonseka hit the headlines in June when he said that the Tamil Tiger rebels had been defeated as a conventional force.
He said troops were advancing steadily into the rebel-held north and within a year the Tigers would lose large areas and their control over the population.
But he admitted a low-level insurgency could last indefinitely.
The general himself narrowly escaped death when a woman suicide bomber targeted him in April 2006 inside the high security army headquarters complex.
 

netlife007

Well-known member
  • Feb 10, 2008
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    I regret to say this.
    If Fonseka loose this election. Fonseka will for sure become a Ponseka like his counterparts Ponil and Mangalika.
     

    JothiPerera

    Banned
    Nov 27, 2009
    316
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    0
    I regret to say this.
    If Fonseka loose this election. Fonseka will for sure become a Ponseka like his counterparts Ponil and Mangalika.

    I agree 100% machan
     

    netlife007

    Well-known member
  • Feb 10, 2008
    10,911
    2,371
    113
    Earth
    SF is good in commanding an army, but he is going to be a novice politician. He is entering into a field that he has no clue. Ranil and Mangala are very good when it comes to politics. General fellow is going to be a more or less a puppeteer of them.

    When it comes to this presidential election, MR will be more or less like a street fighter, where he is a hard core politician.

    If gotabaya was not there, then during the past war, MR would have been a puppeteer of SF for the war matters.

    Do not just look at the surface, you need to analyze what will happen.......