Sri
Lankan judge pistol whipped, colleagues strike
Mon Oct 8, 2012
(Reuters) - A senior Sri Lankan High Court judge was
beaten with pistols and hospitalised on Sunday, triggering a one day strike by
the island nation's judges, who were already angry at perceived political
interference in the courts.
Mon Oct 8, 2012
(Reuters) - A senior Sri Lankan High Court judge was
beaten with pistols and hospitalised on Sunday, triggering a one day strike by
the island nation's judges, who were already angry at perceived political
interference in the courts.
The
victim of the attack, Judge Manjula Tilakaratne, last month complained of
pressure on a judicial commission he heads that can appoint and transfer judges
and magistrates, after it rejected an invitation to meet President Mahinda
Rajapaksa
Rajapaksa
condemned the violence against Tilakaratne and ordered the police to bring the
perpetrators to justice, the government said in a statement.
Political
violence has eased since the army crushed the 30-year-old Tamil Tiger rebellion
in 2009, but international human rights groups say serious rule of law problems
remain, with abductions, attacks on media and government critics not
uncommon.
"He
was attacked by four gunmen asking if he was the secretary of the Judicial
Service Commission," a judge who visited Tilakaratne in the hospital told
Reuters, asking not to be named for fear of reprisals.
"He
was attacked with pistols on his face and manhandled."
Judges
will not work on Monday in protest at the attack, a judicial association said in
a statement.
The
police said a special operation had been launched to track and arrest the
culprits.
Tilakaratne
has said he received death threats after he complained last month of
intimidation on the judiciary, following a decision by the commission to suspend
a district judge. (Reporting by Ranga Sirilal and Shihar Aneez; Editing by Frank
Jack Daniel and Will Waterman)