Sri Lankan author attacked ahead of key presidential polls
Attack comes a week after Lasantha Wijeratne published a book criticising the main opposition candidate.
Armed men have stabbed and injured a Sri Lankan writer in the southern Galle district, a week after he published a book criticising the main opposition candidate in Saturday’s presidential polls, police said.
The attackers stormed the home of Lasantha Wijeratne on Thursday, who released his book Wasteful Development and Corruption last week and gave a copy to the ruling party candidate Sajith Premadasa.
“Four men broke into the house and stabbed him in the arm after holding a pistol to his wife’s head,” Wijeratne’s lawyer Tharaka Nanayakkara told AFP news agency by telephone. “They smashed furniture before escaping.”
Local media published a photo appearing to show Wijeratne in hospital with a bandaged arm, while Sri Lanka’s Centre for Monitoring Election Violence (CMEV) said on Twitter that the writer had been injured in the hand.
Nanayakkara said the attackers accused Wijeratne of harming the campaign of Gotabaya Rajapaksa who is believed to be in a close race with Premadasa for the presidency.
CMEV has received reports that journalist Lasantha Wijeratne was attacked and his home damaged by an unidentified group of persons early morning today (Nov 14) in his home in Habaraduwa, Galle district. He was injured in the hand and hospitalised.#PresPoll2019 #PresPollSL #lka
— CMEV (@cmev) November 14, 2019
Gotabaya is the brother of former President Mahinda Rajapaksa, during whose decade in power until 2015 at least 14 journalists were killed, according to Reporters Without Borders.
Police said they have launched an investigation into the incident in the south of the island nation, but were yet to arrest any suspects.
It came even as Election Commission Chairman Mahinda Deshapriya said the campaign had been relatively peaceful compared with previous polls.
However, he said the behaviour of both private and state-controlled television networks had been highly biased and he hoped to prosecute offenders after the election.
Tense election
No media organisation has yet been prosecuted for violating election laws, but last week, Deshapriya banned a state TV network from broadcasting any political content after accusing it of partisan coverage.
However, the Commission reversed the move the next day following protests that it was not being even-handed with all media outlets violating campaign rules governing broadcasts.
“The run-up to the election was relatively peaceful, but the campaign in the media is the worst we have ever seen,” Deshapriya said.
Campaign rallies ended on Wednesday night leaving a two-day cooling period before Saturday’s poll in which 16 million people are eligible to elect a leader from a record 35 candidates – including two Buddhist monks and just one woman.
Frontrunners Premadasa and Rajapaksa wrapped up their final rallies amid tight security involving hundreds of elite police and paramilitary units.
Premadasa, 52, is the son of assassinated President Ranasinghe Premadasa, who was killed in a suicide bombing in 1993 carried out by Tamil separatists, the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE).
Gotabya Rajapaksa narrowly escaped a suicide bomb attack in 2006 blamed on the LTTE.
While ethnic tensions have eased, this year the country was rocked by coordinated bombings on Easter Sunday that killed at least 269 people.
The European Union on Wednesday despatched 30 additional election observers around the country, joining 50 who have been in Sri Lanka for a month following the campaign.