Dullas Questions Why Former Army Chief Sarath Fonseka Still Not Grilled Over Keith Noyahr Abduction

September 17, 2018

Joint Opposition MP Dullas Alahapperuma yesterday questioned why former Army Commander Sarath Fondeka had not been questioned on journalist Keith Noyahr's abduction. 

The statement comes as a response to the CID questioning former President Mahinda Rajapaksa and former Defence Secretary Gotabhaya Rajapaksa over the same incident. 

In his statement , Alahapperuma said former UNP MP Joseph Michael Perera, making a statement in Parliament at the time Noyahr was abducted, stated that former Army Commander Fonseka was responsible for the abduction

The statement added, “In the days that followed, there was an attempt on the part of government politicians, the state media, websites connected to the government and by some NGO activists, to allege or insinuate that the former President was involved in the Keith Noyahr incident. A few weeks after that, on September 12, the CID obtained a statement from former Defence Secretary Gotabaya Rajapsksa as well, about the Noyahr incident. Thus we see that there is a surreptitious attempt to create the public perception that the Rajapaksas were responsible for this assault on a journalist. It is now ten years since this incident took place and it is important to remind the public of certain facts relating to this case.

The abduction of Keith Noyahr took place on 22 May 2008. This was followed by attacks on two more media personnel, Namal Perera and Mahendra Ratnaweera on 30 June 2008. On 8 July 2008, the then Chief Opposition Whip UNP Parliamentarian Joseph Michael Perera made a special statement in Parliament about these incidents under the title “Threats to journalists” where he emphatically stated that these attacks on media persons are being carried out by a special team under the then army commander and that they had obtained this information from a person directly involved with this special team. The Army commander at the time these incidents took place was Lt. Gen. Sarath Fonseka. If a journalist faces a threat, we have to assume that it is connected to something he may have written.

In this regard, the article titled “An army is not its commander’s private fiefdom” which appeared as the ‘Military Matters’ column written by Keith Noyahr on 11 May 2008 i.e. ten days before he was abducted and assaulted; is a vital clue as to who would have had a motive to attack Noyahr. However we see that the CID is deliberately trying to avoid taking into consideration Keith Noyahr’s article of 11 May 2008 and Chief Opposition Whip Joseph Michael Perera’s special statement in Parliament on 8 July 2008. We believe that the reason for this reluctance is because the person responsible for the abduction of Keith Noyhar is a prominent member of the yahapalana government.

Instead of following the clues which may indicate who would have abducted and assaulted Noyahr, the police are engaged in a dishonest attempt to mislead the public by investigating the phone calls that are said to have been exchanged between various individuals to have Noyahr rescued. Since we cannot simply stand by and allow the CID to ignore vital clues in the purported investigation they are making, we will make a request to the police to follow up on the line inquiry that reveals itself through the article that Noyahr wrote on May 11,2008, and the special statement that Chief Opposition Whip Joseph Michael Perera made in Parliament on July 8, 2008. If we do not receive a satisfactory response from the police to this request, we will present the relevant facts to the Courts."