http://ap.google.com/article/ALeqM5ihrrDvGI_ayIzYOuyyKoVCQx6I-QD90HHGD00

Sri Lanka rescinds move to bar foreign media for elections
2 hours ago

VALAICHCHENAI, Sri Lanka (AP) — The Sri Lankan government said
Thursday it was barring foreign journalists from covering weekend
elections in the Eastern Province, but backed off hours later
following a wave of protests by journalists and rights groups.

The election pits a coalition of the ruling party and former rebels
against opposition parties in a region the government said it had
freed from the control of Tamil Tiger rebels last year.

Opposition officials and rights groups say the former rebels are
terrorizing voters and opponents and accuse the ruling party of using
state resources to ensure its victory Saturday.

On Thursday, an Associated Press reporter and a photographer were
stopped at a checkpoint in the eastern town of Valaichchenai and
ordered to leave the province and head straight back to the capital,
Colombo. Their license plate was then distributed to checkpoints in
the area to ensure they complied.

Maj. Gen. Palitha Fernando, a senior official in the Defense Ministry,
said any foreigner not registered as an election observer was barred
from the volatile province during the polls.

Fernando said the barring of journalists and other foreigners was for
their own protection.

"It could be dangerous. If something happens and a foreigner gets
injured it will create problems," Fernando said.

Media rights organizations protested the ban.

"Discouraging foreign media groups from covering the Eastern Province
election shows the sorry state of our people's right to information,"
a coalition of five media rights groups said in a statement.

"We call for an investigation as to why there was an attempt to keep
foreign media away from an election closely followed by the country
and which many groups fear could be marred by violence and
malpractice," the statement added.

Fernando later said there was a misunderstanding, journalists would be
allowed to cover the election, and the reporters were allowed to
return to the east.

Saturday's first-ever elections for the Eastern Provincial Council are
seen as a referendum on the government's performance since it drove
the Tamil Tigers out of the region, which they had ruled for 13 years.

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