Sri Lanka Frees Muslim Leader Held under anti-Terror Law
Sri Lanka freed an opposition Muslim political leader from police custody without charge after detaining him earlier in the week under a tough anti-terrorism law, his lawyer said Saturday.
Azath Sally, 49, the former deputy mayor of Colombo, was arrested on Sunday in what the minority Muslim community described as the latest attack on them in the Buddhist-dominated island nation.
Sally, leader of the Muslim National Unity Alliance, was released Friday after authorities revoked a 90-day detention ordered by President Mahinda Rajapakse, who is also the minister of defense, his lawyer Shiraz Noordeen said.
"No charges have been pressed and he was released after negotiations with the defense ministry," Noordeen told Agence France Presse.
A vocal critic of Rajapakse, Sally was in hospital Saturday following a hunger strike he launched in protest over his arrest under the Prevention of Terrorism Act.
"They released me because of the tremendous international and local pressure on the government," Sally told AFP from his hospital bed where he was being treated for dehydration.
The United States, which moved a censure motion against Sri Lanka at the March U.N. Human Rights Council sessions in Geneva, had asked Colombo to ensure the opposition leader had access to lawyers.
Local media reports quoted unnamed officials as saying Sally was accused of inciting Muslims to take up arms against the state -- a claim he strongly denied.
Police did not comment on the politician's release, but the state-run Daily News paper said he had requested a "pardon" from Rajapakse.
The Muslim Council of Sri Lanka (MCSL), an umbrella organisation of Muslim groups, said Sally's release could help defuse religious tensions.
Sally had blamed authorities for turning a blind eye to an anti-Muslim campaign that culminated in an arson attack on two Muslim-owned businesses -- a clothing store and a vehicle yard -- in March.
Three Buddhist monks and 14 other Buddhists arrested over the attacks were later freed after the police and the victims did not press charges.
The Muslim minority accounts for just under 10 percent of the 20-million population.
Last week, London-based Amnesty International accused Sri Lanka of instilling a climate of fear by stepping up repression and clamping down on dissent -- a charge denied by Colombo as a "fascinating piece of fiction".