Wednesday 25 May 2011
The Channel 4 News entry comprised reports from last year that showed further film purporting to show the execution of Tamil soldiers - and forensic investigation that led to some of the victims being identified.
Some of the reports were aired as President Rajapaksa visited the UK late last year - and were though to be behind his visit being cut short. The films have been cited in a recent investigation by the UN and will feature as part of a Channel 4 documentary later this month.
Commenting on the award, Jim Gray Editor of Channel 4 News said: "Huge congratulations to Ben De Pear and his team for cracking journalism and sheer dogged persistence on this story.
"Our achievements on Sri Lanka are genuinely important and, as ever, it was the result of a great team effort, so thank you to Jonathan Miller, Nevine Mabro, Sarah Corp and Girish Juneja - the editors that worked on very difficult footage - and of course those who must remain unnamed."
The judges comments were:
"The piece was streets ahead and it should not preclude it winning because it's the second year in a row. It should be rewarded for depth, effort and staying with the story.
"Keeping a story going is more challenging than finding new ones, in many ways.
"I was impressed by the commitment from the team, and the impact of their work is still to come: it could result in a UN inquiry. There is a chance of real tangible impact.
"Disturbing, deep, important." Full Story>>>