Competent authority vs. the press
This is a tale of censorship. Of how a government belea guered by war with a deadly opponent, chose to muzzle its media. Of how the media took on the government, and the way the court dealt with it. The lessons are plenty to learn from the "heightened" media censorship announced by the Sri Lankan government on 3 May.
At first impact, however, neither the press nor the public was unduly perturbed. After all, the country had been under emergency rule for the better half of the past two decades and had witnessed successive rulers summarily using emergency law to control the press for varying ends and to varying degrees. And there was nothing to indicate that this current round of censorship was going to be anything worse. Matters soon became clearer.