Wickrematunge was shot while he was on his way to work around 10:30 a.m on 8 January 2009, a few days before he was supposed to give evidence against
Gotabaya Rajapaksa's alleged corruption in arms deals before a judge. Four armed assassins riding motorcycles blocked Wickrematunge's vehicle before breaking open his window and shooting him. He was taken to the
Colombo South Teaching Hospital. It was initially planned with a helicopter on standby to transfer him to the
Colombo National Hospital. A specialist team of 20 medical personnel were called in for the surgery. Despite surgery lasting nearly three hours, Wickrematunge died from his head wounds.
Reaction Wickrematunge's assassination caused an international outcry.
Reporters Without Borders said that "Sri Lanka has lost its more talented, courageous, and iconoclastic journalists", and said that "President
Mahinda Rajapaksa, his associates and the government media are directly to blame because they incited hatred against him and allowed an outrageous level of impunity to develop as regards violence against the press". President
Mahinda Rajapaksa described the
assassination as an attempt to discredit the government and said he was both grieved and shocked and stated that he had instructed a thorough police inquiry and called the assassination an "International Conspiracy". The
Opposition Leader Ranil Wickremesinghe observed that it was part of an
anti-democratic conspiracy and accused the government of attempting to silence its critics. On 9 January, Wickremesinghe stated in Parliament that elements of the state intelligence apparatus were responsible for Wickrematunge's murder, claiming that the military units that carried out the assassination were effectively not under the control of the Cabinet. Wickremasinghe went on to say that military forces members were shocked and felt the reputation of the country was being ruined by the assassination of Wickrematunge. The
United National Party, Sri Lanka's main opposition party, staged a demonstration in parliament on 9 January to protest his assassination and
Mangala Samaraweera called Wickrematunge's murder an "insoluble bloodstain in our national history" and apologized to Sri Lanka for "bringing this dark regime into power," The assassination was condemned by
Norway, the
United States, the
United Kingdom, the
European Union,
India and
Japan, the
United Nations strongly condemned the assassination while the
World Bank expressed its concerns over the attack. President
Mahinda Rajapaksa told
Time about Wickrematunge: "He was a good friend of mine. He had informed somebody to inform me that he was in danger. But unfortunately, I didn't get that message. I would have told him to go to the nearest police station. No one knows what happened."
Lord Malloch-Brown Minister of State at the
Foreign and Commonwealth Office, said in a statement to the
UK Parliament that the British government condemned the killing of Wickrematunge and said that it was the duty of the authorities to take prompt action into these incidents: Sri Lankan church leaders voiced their concerns over the attack and the ethnic violence in the Island nation. Anglican Bishop
Duleep de Chickera of
Colombo said in a statement, "The assassination of Lasantha Wickrematunge, in broad daylight on a public road, has sent shock waves of anger, fear and desperation through the country. This deliberate and senseless act ... is part of a wider and worsening strategy to suppress and silence the media." In a statement ahead of
World Press Freedom Day former United Nations Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon called on the government of Sri Lanka to ensure that those responsible for Lasantha Wickrematunge's murder are found and prosecuted.
Investigation After denying all responsibility for the attack the
Rajapaksa government called for an investigation. Despite intense media pressure, no one was arrested, and Sri Lankan media speculated that the murder investigation may "end up as a cover-up", and that safeguards for an independent media appeared bleak. In January 2010, the Criminal investigation department identified a member of the Tripoli platoon as a suspect. The Tripoli platoon is a Sri Lankan army platoon that was being accused of several crimes during the time of Gotabaya Rajapaksa's term as defense secretary.
Inspector General of Police ordered the Criminal investigations department to halt the investigation and transfer the case to the Terrorist investigation division. In February 2010, The Terrorist investigation division arrested 17 military intelligence officers on suspicion of Wickrematunge's assassination. All 17 suspects were released without charges and the terrorist investigation division took into custody one member of the Tripoli platoon who was released shortly afterwards without being charged. Soon after Wickrematunge's murder, police searched for his cell phone but did not recover it from his possessions as it had been reported as stolen. In November 2010, police recovered the phone and a suspect was in remand prison for over a year for having Wickrematunge's phone in his possession.
Ranil Wickremesinghe, accused
Sarath Fonseka, the former army commander, of the murder of Lasantha Wickrematunge in 2008 and 2009. In 2011, the former MP
Rajiva Wijesinha told BBC Sinhala Service that the British High Commission in Colombo had told him it possessed evidence that former military chief Gen
Sarath Fonseka was involved in the assassination Lasantha Wickremetunge. According to Sarath Fonseka the order for the assassination was given by Gotabaya On 26 February 2010, Pitchai Jesudasan, a garage mechanic from
Nuwara Eliya was arrested and remanded on the charges that it was his National Identity Card that was used to obtain multiple SIM cards used by the Army Intelligence to communicate with each other in Wickrematunge's murder. Evidence of Jesudasan led to the arrest of Kandegedara Piyawansa an Army Intelligence officer who had been accused of having imbibed the mechanic with alcohol to steal his ID card. Both suspects were in remand custody when Jesudasan died mysteriously inside the prison on 13 October 2011 and Piyawansa was set free to resume work in his previous unit. After the elections, Rajapaska requested his departure to be postponed claiming an urgent matter regarding national security. Investigations on assassinations, abductions and assaults on journalist after the fall of the Rajapaksa government revealed that Gotabaya directed a
death squad to attack journalists that was outside the Army command structure during this time 17 journalists and media workers were killed and others were either assaulted or abducted. In July 2016, it was revealed by investigators that Dias, who worked as a
Chauffeur for Wickrematunge had been blindfolded and abducted by an Army Intelligence officer. Dias, told investigators he was often intoxicated and had been openly alleging that
Gotabaya Rajapaksa was behind the assassination of his boss. Dias was traced and questioned by police. He agreed to identify the person who abducted him in a lineup. Dias told the
Criminal Investigation Department (Sri Lanka) that the assailant "looked just like his Uncle". After working with a
sketch artist, a key suspect was traced and soon identified by Dias. On 17 February 2016, The Criminal investigations department released composite sketches of two suspects who they believed to have carried out the murder to the public. In 2016, Criminal investigations department reported that two Tamil youth were killed to cover up Wickrematunge's murder. On 27 January 2009, the Mt Lavinia police had reported they recovered two motorcycles from among bushes on the banks of the Attidiya canal which was reported to have been used in Wickrematunge's murder operation. In 2016, Parents of two Tamil men who had gone missing from the North of Sri Lanka had been desperately searching for their sons for some time. The two young men named Balraj Ram Prakash and Kumarasingham Vishnukumar had been seen by eye witnesses being stopped by Sri Lanka's security forces in
Vavuniya while they were travelling to
Chettikulam before they were allegedly blind folded and abducted. On 10 October 2016, the Criminal investigations department got the family members of the Tamil youths to identify their remains using pictures of the charred bodies which DNA tests proved were of the two men. Their bodies were found in an area in
Anuradhapura.
Exhumation On 27 September 2016, an
Exhumation of Wickrematunge's remains took place under a court order, after police investigators sought permission for a new examination due to contradictory medical and post mortem examination reports. Wickrematunge's grave in
Colombo was under armed guard after a new autopsy request was announced earlier in the month, two months after a Military Intelligence official was arrested in connection with the killing of Wickrematunge. The officer who carried out the autopsy reported that the death occurred due to gunshot wounds while the surgeon said the wounds were not from bullet.
Further investigation (2016–present) In October 2016, a retired intelligence officer committed suicide and left a note claiming he is the killer of Wickrematunge and that the intelligence officers that were arrested and under investigation were innocent. The intelligence officer's family reported to Police that they did not believe the officer's death was a suicide. In December 2016, Investigators travelled to Australia to interview and record statements from Wickrematunge's family. The
Criminal Investigation Department presented facts pertaining to Wickrematunge's assassination to the Mount Lavinia
Magistrate's court. According to court documents filed, Wickrematunge's daughter told investigators her father warned her he would be killed because of his investigations into the MiG deal. In February 2018, former Deputy inspector general of police Prassana Nanayakkara was arrested under suspicions of concealing evidence over Wickrematunge's murder. In November, during the
2018 Sri Lankan constitutional crisis, Nishantha Silva one of the lead investigators in Wickrematunge's case was transferred from the Criminal Investigation Department to the
Negombo Police division on a service requirement. Wickrematunge's daughter Ahimsa Wickrematunge, condemned the move to transfer Silva in an open letter addressed to President
Maithripala Sirisena. The Transfer was stopped upon Wickrematunge's daughters letter. On 14 August 2019, Wickrematunge's daughter accused Ranil Wickremesinghe of using her father's name to win votes during the election and failing to do enough to prosecute Wickrematunge's killers and accused Wickremesinghe of protecting Gotabaya Rajapaksa in an open letter. After the
2019 Sri Lankan presidential election, Nishantha Silva left Sri Lanka reportedly seeking asylum in Switzerland after Gotabaya Rajapaksa was elected as president. In July 2020,
Shani Abeysekara former senior superintendent of police who headed the Criminal Investigation Department and was leading the investigation into Wickrematunge's death was arrested by the Colombo Crimes Division. His family stated they believed he was being targeted for exposing human rights abuses implicating top politicians. Abeysekara was released on bail in June 2021. In January 2020, Gotabaya Rajapaksa appointed a commission on political victimisation to exonerate officials implicated in Wickrematunge's murder. In June 2020, Wickrematunge's daughter appealed to the National police commission to block the appointment of Prassana Alwis as director of the Criminal investigations department claiming that the department had caught him tampering with important evidence. In July 2020, Criminal investigations department brought a news editor into questioning over a 2017 news report covered on Wickrematunge's murder demanding the editor reveal his sources. In June 2021, Abeysekara wrote to the
Sri Lankan Inspector General of Police and the Human Rights Commission of Sri Lanka, requesting protection because he was facing consistent threats of assassination and physical harm due to the work and investigations he carried out.
Hague people's tribunal trial On 12 May 2022, The People's Tribunal in the
Hague held a trial producing facts and testimonies in the unsolved assassination of Wickrematunge and two other journalists from
Syria and
Mexico. The tribunal opined that the Sri Lankan Government as well the governments of Mexico and Syria had also violated a number of other conventions, treaties and other international, regional and national legal instruments which they had undertaken to uphold. The Peoples tribunal at the Hague announcing its verdict indicted the Sri Lankan Government of human rights violation allegations against the murder of Wickrematunge.
U.S lawsuit In April 2019, Wickrematunge's daughter Ahimsa Wickrematunge filed a civil lawsuit against
Gotabaya Rajapaksa in the state of
California. Wickrematunge's daughter's lawsuit alleged that Rajapaksa was behind his death. Rajapaksa, who was visiting the U.S. to renounce his citizenship, was served legal documents outside a
Trader Joe's parking lot in
Pasadena. Rajapaksa arrived back to Sri Lanka from the United States and was greeted by his supporters and members of the Buddhist Clergy who came to the
Bandaranaike International Airport to stand in solidarity with Rajapaksa. Due to the case filed against him, Rajapaksa's ability to renounce his citizenship was stalled. Rajapaksa alleged that the case filed against him by Wickrematunge's daughter was "politically motivated" by the
United National Party to stop him from contesting the Presidential Election that year. Rajapaksa took to social media and shared a message later that day that said, "Touched by the warm welcome. Greatly appreciate your love and support. No one can obstruct me from fulfilling my obligations to our beloved nation. Ready to serve my country again if and when duty calls."
United Nations case On 8 January 2021, on the 12th anniversary of Wickrematunge's death, Wickrematunge's daughter filed a complaint with the
United Nations's Human Rights Committee against the Government of Sri Lanka, seeking accountability for the regime's role in the extra judicial killing of her father. ==Personal life==