BOARD OF DIRECTORS
Arnold Amber The Newspaper Guild President
Mori Abdolalian CJFE Journalists in Exile
Alison Armstrong Journalist/writer
Bob Carty CBC-Radio "The Sunday Edition"
Havoc Franklin CBC Radio
Peter Jacobsen Bersenas Jacobsen Chouest Thomson Blackburn LLP
Alice Klein Now Magazine
Donald Livingstone Promeus
Anita Mielewczyk Journalist/Law Student
John Norris Criminal Law Lawyer
Mary Deanne Shears Journalist
Kelly Toughill King's College School of Journalism
Anna Maria Tremonti CBC Radio "The Current"
Philip Tunley Lawyer, Stockwoods LLP
|
Media Release
CJFE Condemns Vandalisation of Newspaper Office
(Toronto, February 23, 2010) Canadian Journalists for Free Expression (CJFE) condemns the vandalisation of Uthayan, a Scarborough Ontario-based newspaper which occurred sometime in the early hours
of Sunday, February 21.
Uthayan's editor Logan Logendralingam received a phone call at 7:30 Sunday morning. He reports that the unidentified caller said, "Okay, your friends went to Colombo and met the president of
Sri Lanka - the enemy of Tamils who killed 40,000 innocent people. Go to your office: There is a message for you." When Logendralingam reached the newspaper's office he discovered that the
large plate glass window had been smashed.
Uthayan has been in existence for 15 years and is read widely by the local Tamil community. Logendralingam believes that the violence is in connection to a recent meeting between individuals
from the Tamil diaspora and Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa. However, he did not report on this in Uthayan. He says "they know I'm a close friend with these people. They wanted to
take some revenge and so they targeted me."
Logendralingam spoke to CJFE after the attack and says that he will continue to publish as before. He is also hopeful that the police investigation will track down the perpetrators and that
they will be brought to justice.
This is not the first time there have been violent attacks on individuals and media property in the Tamil community. In the 1990s there were vicious assaults and tactics that caused
newspapers deemed to be critical of the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) to be closed down. In 1993, Tamil journalist D. B. S. Jeyaraj was badly beaten resulting in a broken leg and
head injuries. In another case, distributors of the weekly newspaper Thayagam were targeted.
CJFE condemns this act of violence against the newspaper Uthayan and all other acts of intimidation that have been used to silence dissenting voices in the Tamil community in Canada.
Canadian Journalists for Free Expression (CJFE) is an association of more than 300 journalists, editors, publishers, producers, students and others who work to promote and defend free
expression and press freedom in Canada and abroad.
For more information, contact CJFE Manager, Julie Payne at (416) 515-9622 x. 226
|