Mylvaganam Nimalarajan

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On the night of October 19, 2000, a group of unidentified gunmen approached the home of Nimalarajan, a Jaffna-based journalist who reported for various news organizations, including the BBC’s Tamil and Sinhala-language services, the Tamil-language daily Virakesari, and the Sinhala-language weekly Ravaya.

The assailants shot the journalist through the window of his study, where he was working on an article, and threw a grenade into the home before fleeing the premises. The attack occurred during curfew hours in a high-security zone in central Jaffna town. Army officers were summoned to the house, and they took the journalist to Jaffna Hospital, where he was pronounced dead. The journalist’s parents and his 11-year-old nephew were seriously injured in the attack.

Local journalists suspect that Nimalarajan’s reporting on vote-rigging and intimidation in Jaffna during the recent parliamentary elections may have led to his murder.

Sri Lankan president Chandrika Bandaranaike Kumaratunga ordered defense authorities to launch an immediate inquiry into the assassination. In an October 18, 2001, letter, CPJ urged the president to ensure that the investigation was pursued vigorously, and its findings made public.

Police failed to respond to repeated requests for information regarding the status of the investigation, which appeared to have stalled by year’s end.

On February 22, 2022, the War Crimes Team at the London Metropolitan Police arrested a 48-year-old man in connection Namalarajan’s murder, according to a statement from police. Police released the man, whose name was not disclosed, and said in a statement that they were continuing to investigate him under Section 51 of the International Criminal Court Act of 2001, which covers genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes.