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UNESCO has accepted that not a single journalist
had been killed in Sri Lanka in 2007. UNESCO
Director General Koichiro Matsuura's report for 2007
listed names of 53 journalists killed in number
countries such as Iraq, Afghanistan, Somalia DPR
Congo, Palestine and Myanmar.
There had been no killings of journalist in Sri
Lanka, India, Philippines, Russia, Colombia,
Ecuador, Lebanon and Pakistan, where there had been
killings of journalists in the previous year. The
Director General of UNESCO stated this in his report
submitted to the Intergovernmental Committee of the
International Programme for Development of
Communications held at UNESCO Headquarters in Paris
from March 26 to 28. Sugeeswara Senadhira, Minister
Counsellor of the
Sri Lanka Embassy in Paris represented Sri Lanka at
this meeting.
Analysts pointed out that UNESCO Director General's
report is an admittance that the Voice of Tigers,
the broadcasting arm of the LTTE could not be
considered as a civil media institution. In November
2007, three LTTE cadres working at the Voice of
Tigers died when the clandestine broadcasting
station was attacked by Sri Lanka Air Force. In
December 2007, Koichiro Matsuura, Director General
of UNESCO has issued a statement on the incident and
the Government of Sri Lanka pointed out that UNESCO
had no mandate to issue a statement on the aerial
attack on a terrorist broadcasting station. The
Intergovernmental Council of IPDC unanimously
denounced attacks targeting journalists and urged
Member States to comply with relevant obligations
under international law to end impunity for such
crimes.
The adopted decision, announced by the newly elected
IPDC Chairman, Ambassador Walter Fust (Switzerland),
recalls UN Security Council Resolution 1738 (2006),
which refers to the Geneva Conventions and to the
responsibility of Member States to prosecute those
responsible for "serious violations." The Council's
decision requests Member States to assume
responsibility for monitoring the investigation of
killings condemned by the Director-General of UNESCO
and informing the Organization of actions taken and
of the status of the judicial inquires conducted
into each case.
Over the past two years, UNESCO has publicly
condemned the killings of 121 journalists – 68 in
2006 and 53 in 2007. The 26th Council session hosted
a debate which underlined the challenges of
protecting journalists, and proposed measures to
encourage higher level advocacy both nationally and
internationally. Rodney Pinder of the International
News Safety Institute maintained that impunity
continues to be a major problem and that
insufficient measures are in place to ensure the
safety of journalists in the field.
Courtesy: Asian Tribune
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