Attackers stab S. Lankan judge

Attackers stab S. Lankan judge
Updated 08 October 2012
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Attackers stab S. Lankan judge

Attackers stab S. Lankan judge

COLOMBO: Unidentified attackers stabbed and badly wounded a senior Sri Lankan judge yesterday, police said, amid heightened tension between the government and the judiciary.
Four armed men assaulted Manjula Tilakaratne, a High Court judge and secretary of the independent Judicial Service Commission (JSC), in a suburb of Colombo.
He was taken to hospital after being stabbed at least three times, and his mobile phone was stolen.
The attack came as the local Sunday Times newspaper said the government was locked in a “cold war” with judges over a recent announcement by the JSC that it was being subjected to “threats and intimidation.”
Tilakaratne issued a statement last month saying the JSC, which is responsible for the administration of Sri Lanka’s justice system, was being targeted for criticism.
“The main objective of those behind the conspiracy... is to destroy the independence of the judiciary and the rule of law,” Tilakaratne said.
The government said on Sunday it “strongly condemned” the attack, adding that President Mahinda Rajapakse had instructed police to bring the perpetrators to justice.
International rights groups have raised concern about rule of law and accountability in Sri Lanka as the country emerges from nearly four decades of ethnic conflict that claimed up to 100,000 lives. Government forces crushed Tamil Tiger rebels and declared an end to decades of fighting in May 2009.
Separatelly, two foreign tourists killed by lightning in Sri Lanka’s central region have been identified as South Koreans, police said yesterday, correcting earlier reports they were Chinese.
Police spokesman Ajith Rohana said the victims, a man and a woman, had been erroneously identified as Chinese tourists after the Saturday evening strike in Haputale, 200 kilometers east of Colombo.
He said three other South Korean women were injured and were undergoing hospital treatment.
The group were at Lipton’s Seat, one of the highest look-out points in central Sri Lanka, during a sudden thunderstorm, police said.