November 3, 2013,
International Federation of Journalists (IFJ) Asia-Pacific  Director Jacqui Park and her deputy Jane Worthington arrived in Australia on  Saturday after being detained and questioned in Sri Lanka for attending a media  workshop while being in Colombo on tourist visas.
 
The treatment meted out to Park and her colleague is in sharp  contrast to the way the government has chosen to deal with Australian gambling  czar James Packer. It is going out of its way even to change the existing laws  to grant Packer tax breaks and make him feel at home in spite of mounting  opposition from some quarters to his grand plans to set up a star class casino  resort in this country. It was only the other day that we saw several ministers  dancing attendance on him. But, the same government worthies lost no time in  pouncing on media activists Park and Worthington, as if they had landed here to  commit some heinous crime.
 
 The government should have allowed the media workshop to  continue uninterrupted and the visa issue could have been settled  diplomatically. But, it, true to form, acted like a bull in a China shop. If the  IFJ officials had been planning to stay longer to attend any other media events  they could have been issued with visas needed for that purpose.
 
 This is a country where lawbreakers become lawmakers and  criminals go scot free thanks to their political connections. On Saturday, we  reported an incident where a gang of politically connected thugs assaulted a  police sergeant who had prevented them from attacking some foreigners. But for  that intrepid cop they might even have killed the tourists fleeing for their  lives like the Briton put to a violent death in Tangalle in 2011, landing the  government in another diplomatic soup ahead of CHOGM. It is such violent  elements who need to be tracked. Time was when terrorists were given unbridled  freedom at the behest of the international community to engage in political work  while being armed and making preparations for war. But, intriguingly, foreign  media activists here on tourist visas are promptly detained and grilled!
 
 The two IFJ officials have, following their harrowing  experience, claimed that by detaining them Sri Lanka has sent a clear message to  others about the kind of treatment they could expect if they campaigned for  freedom of expression. They are entitled to their opinion, but they should have  admitted that they, too, were at fault as they had not mentioned the specific  purpose of their visit in their visa applications thus allowing Sri Lankan  immigration authorities to do what they did, however deplorable the manner in  which the issue was handled may be. One of the cardinal rules of journalism is  that the truth or part thereof must not be suppressed. We don’t think the  government would have been able to deny the IFJ duo visas if they had mentioned  the real purpose of their visit not because it is any great fan of IFJ but  because it would not have been able to justify such action. There was absolutely  no need for any undercover journalistic op.
 
 That being said, it needs to be added that Sri Lanka is not the  only country where journalists undergo harrowing experience over visa matters.  Some of the journalists working for our newspaper group, have been detained at  foreign airports and sent back home unceremoniously despite having valid visas  and official invitations to the events they were to attend. A senior diplomat of  an Asian country once threatened to deny visas to all Island journalists  or even anyone connected to them because we had run some articles critical of  his government. However, sanity prevailed and he changed his mind a few days  later. A Sri Lankan Prime Minister was once held at a foreign airport for an  inordinately long time a few years ago due to some protocol bungling. But, this  does not mean tracking foreign journalists and looking for the slightest excuse  to harass them should be taken for granted.
 
 The government ought to stop viewing all foreign journalists or media rights  activists as enemies on secret missions to destroy this country simply because  there could be one or two propaganda hit men among them. The best way it could  take the media, both international and local, off its back is to ensure that  human rights and media freedom are protected here.
IS