Sri Lankan Defense Secretary Gotabaya Rajapaksa ordered Britain's Channel
4 News Asia correspondent Nick Paton-Walsh, cameraman Matt
Jasper, and producer Bessie Du, to leave the country on May 10, 2009,
according to Channel 4 and international news reports.
Channel 4 broadcast a
report by the team on May 5 showing footage filmed secretly in a camp in
the city of Vavuniya, northern Sri Lanka, detaining civilians displaced by the Sri Lankan government's civil
war with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam which ended following a series of
government victories in May. The footage had been taken inside the camps
without an army escort, in defiance of government orders, and included
allegations of guards leaving corpses to rot, food and water shortages, and
sexual abuse, according to a statement by ITN News, which produces Channel 4.
Security officials detained the three journalists in the
eastern port town of Trincomalee and escorted
them to the airport in the capital, Colombo,
where they took a plane to Singapore,
according to the reports.
Nick Paton-Walsh described the order in a blog
post on the Channel 4 news Web site: "I'd spoken amicably to [Gotabaya
Rajapaksa] 45 minutes earlier about getting some better access to Sri Lanka's
25-year war. But this time he was calling me, and seemed to have remembered
something.
Who is this? You rang me earlier? Is this Channel 4? You
have been accusing my soldiers of raping civilians? Your visa is cancelled, you
will be deported. You can report what you like about this country, but from
your own country, not from here."