News & Community eLanka

eLanka

Saturday, 13 Jun 2026
  • Home
  • Read History
  • Articles
    • eLanka Journalists
  • Events
  • Useful links
    • Obituaries
    • Seeking to Contact
    • eLanka Newsletters
    • Weekly Events and Advertisements
    • eLanka Testimonials
    • Sri Lanka Newspapers
    • Sri Lanka TV LIVE
    • Sri Lanka Radio
    • eLanka Recepies
  • Gallery
  • Contact
Newsletter
Sri lankan news
  • eLanka Weddings
  • Property
  • eLanka Shop
  • Business Directory
eLankaeLanka
Font ResizerAa
Search
  • Home
  • Read History
  • Articles
    • eLanka Journalists
  • Events
  • Useful links
    • Obituaries
    • Seeking to Contact
    • eLanka Newsletters
    • Weekly Events and Advertisements
    • eLanka Testimonials
    • Sri Lanka Newspapers
    • Sri Lanka TV LIVE
    • Sri Lanka Radio
    • eLanka Recepies
  • Gallery
  • Contact
Follow US
© 2005 – 2026 eLanka Pty Ltd. All Rights Reserved.
Home » Goodnews Stories Srilankan Expats » Trevine Rodrigo » Sri Lanka today mourns not merely the passing of a journalist, but the silencing of a conscience that spoke truth to power with rare courage, discipline, and integrity. – By Trevine Rodrigo
ArticlesTrevine Rodrigo

Sri Lanka today mourns not merely the passing of a journalist, but the silencing of a conscience that spoke truth to power with rare courage, discipline, and integrity. – By Trevine Rodrigo

eLanka admin
Last updated: January 14, 2026 6:06 pm
By
eLanka admin
ByeLanka admin
Follow:
Share
8 Min Read
SHARE
Views: 32

Sri Lanka today mourns not merely the passing of a journalist, but the silencing of a conscience that spoke truth to power with rare courage, discipline, and integrity. – By Trevine Rodrigo

Iqbal Athas

And may he be remembered not only for what he reported—but for how, and why, he reported it.

Rest in peace, Iqbal Athas. “Sibla Markaam. Sub luk Sub luk.” The lucky few that got mentored by Iqbal would know that code.

Your words remain.I speak not only as an admirer of Iqbal Athas’s work, but as someone who had the profound good fortune to work under him for five years in the early part of the nineteen eighties decade, spanning a General Strike, a Presidential Referendum, Several Elections, Communal Riots of 83, Genesis of the Ealam conflict, Indian backed militant groups, attack on Supreme Court judges, and a variety of incidents including the search for Upali Wijewardena’s crashed learjet and many other stories now long forgotten.

Four decades ago, we were part of his investigative journalism team at Independent Newspapers in Colombo—during a time when no politician, public official, or institution was spared the scrutiny of the daring journalism he encouraged us to pursue. National intelligence relied on our leads and we were equal in our zeal to get to the bottom of the truth.

Under Iqbal Athas, journalism was never a trade; it was a calling, governed by ethics, justice, and an almost sacred respect for facts.

Iqbal Athas

We were taught to report with no fear and no favour. Assertions were meaningless unless supported by evidence. Facts were never taken at face value—they were verified, then verified again, and often a third time, against credible and independent sources.

A story was never abandoned halfway. We were expected to pursue it relentlessly to its proper conclusion: gathering every relevant quote from all stakeholders, perusing and validating documents, and investing whatever time and effort was required to produce an iron-clad story that could neither be refuted nor casually challenged.

This was the discipline he lived by—and the standard he imposed.
Iqbal Athas belonged to a vanishing generation of journalists for whom accuracy was sacred, independence non-negotiable, and public interest the ultimate obligation.

Beginning his career as News Editor of The Sun and Weekend newspapers in the early to mid-1980s, he distinguished himself as both a meticulous editor and a fearless reporter during some of the most turbulent years in Sri Lanka’s modern history.

These were years marked by political upheaval, ethnic conflict, and the steady militarisation of the state. It was in this crucible that his defining vocation emerged: to report on war and national security not as propaganda, but as fact.

Our investigative unit—comprising Trevine Rodrigo, Tyronne Devotta, Lalith Alahakone, the late Kenneth Amarasekera, Milinda Rajasekera, late Melanie John, Minoli De Soyza, Aruna Kulatunga, Jennifer Henricus, Leary Beakmeyer, Winston De Valliere, Pia De Lima, Jack Herft, and many others who followed—was relentlessly pushed to be the very best version of ourselves as journalists.

He demanded excellence, but he also nurtured it.

Iqbal possessed a rare editorial gift: the ability to take the rudimentary drafts of cub reporters and, often overnight, transform them into powerful lead stories—published under their bylines.

Iqbal Athas

This was how he built confidence, loyalty, and courage. It was also how The Sun and Weekend consistently scooped every other daily newspaper in the country, day after day, setting a standard others struggled to match.

He cultivated an extraordinary newsroom culture. During working hours, he was the uncompromising editor—exactting, disciplined, and intolerant of shortcuts. After hours, he became a mentor, confidant, and companion, forging a deep camaraderie among his team.

He balanced the relentless, 24/7 vigilance demanded by developing news with an almost familial bond with those who worked beside him. Few editors have ever mastered the rare art of being both the buddy and the boss, while keeping discipline intact and standards unyielding.

He pushed us beyond chasing page-one exclusives. He urged us to spread our writing wings—to write columns, full-page Sunday features, and to shoulder responsibility for collective investigative series such as Insight, which demanded the highest standards of journalism ever practiced in this country.

Through this, he made us not just reporters, but thinkers, analysts, and custodians of public trust.

As a long-standing columnist for The Sunday Times of Sri Lanka, and later as a contributor to The London Sunday Times, Iqbal Athas became the nation’s most authoritative voice on defence and military affairs.

His work as a Sri Lanka stringer for Jane’s Defence Weekly placed him among an elite global circle of defence correspondents and analysts. Internationally respected, he brought credibility to Sri Lankan journalism at a time when few local voices penetrated global strategic discourse.

His analysis was trusted because it was earned—through painstaking verification, deep institutional knowledge, and an unshakeable refusal to speculate where facts were unavailable.

He demonstrated, by example, that patriotism and accountability are not opposites; that institutions can be respected without being shielded from scrutiny; and that journalism, even in times of war, must remain anchored to truth rather than allegiance.

He paid a price for this integrity—through pressure, intimidation, and attempts at silencing—but he never yielded.

Like the molten lead that once powered the printing presses of The Sun and Weekend, Iqbal Athas forged us in lead—hardening us, shaping us, and setting a benchmark for what journalists of our generation could and should be.

His mentoring was unparalleled, and its imprint remains indelible.

Today, as misinformation proliferates and journalism is too often reduced to noise or narrative, the absence of Iqbal Athas feels especially profound.

His passing leaves a void not easily filled—because credibility, once lost, is difficult to restore, and once earned, impossible to replace.

Sri Lanka has lost a chronicler of its modern conflicts, a guardian of factual truth, and a journalist who understood that history is written first in newspapers, and only later in books.

May his work endure as a benchmark.

May his courage continue to inspire.

Adios Iqbal ~~ Chris Dharmakirti

 




 

Click here to receive your free copy of the eLanka Newsletter twice a week delivered directly to your inbox!

 

TAGGED:Iqbal Athas
Share This Article
Facebook Whatsapp Whatsapp LinkedIn Email Copy Link Print
Previous Article Advertise your property in Sri Lanka Advertise your Property in Sri Lanka for a full year on eLanka – 14th January 2026
Next Article Kaleidoscope 297 ,Pongal Trivia, Beyond Sight, Markets, GOSL Plans, No Trousers, Pongal Trivia, Beyond Sight, Markets, GOSL Plans, No Trousers, Hamburg & more on Kaleidoscope 297
FacebookLike
YoutubeSubscribe
LinkedInFollow
eLanka Wedding
- Advertisement -
Ad image
Most Read
Aus Goverment

Department of Home Affairs – Community Engagement Newsletter: 12 June 2026 [SEC=OFFICIAL]

SriLankan Airlines, UL606, SriLankan Airlines Sydney flight, lightning strike aircraft, flight UL606, Bandaranaike International Airport, BIA Sri Lanka, Sydney bound flight, aviation safety, aircraft lightning strike, Airbus A330, Sri Lanka aviation news, airline safety procedures, emergency return flight, Sydney airport, Sri Lankan community Australia, aviation incident Sri Lanka, flight safety protocols, commercial aircraft lightning strike, Sri Lankan expatriates Australia, airline passenger safety, Civil Aviation Authority Sri Lanka, Daminda Rambukwella, long haul flight safety, Colombo to Sydney flight, airline emergency landing, aircraft maintenance inspection, aviation engineering, Sri Lanka travel news, airline operations, flight disruption management, passenger safety first, international flights Sri Lanka, Sydney travel update, aviation excellence, modern aircraft technology, airline crisis management, Sri Lankan diaspora news, eLanka news, aviation safety standards

Safety First! UL 606 Sydney Flight Returns Safely After ‘Electric’ Encounter

SLIIT, Team Akura, Akura App, Sri Lankan AI Innovation, OneEarth AI Tool Building Challenge 2026, Goldsmiths University London, AI for Education, Sinhala Language Learning App, Artificial Intelligence Sri Lanka, Sri Lankan Students Achievement, Global AI Competition, Educational Technology, AI Learning Platform, Sinhala Education, Early Childhood Education, AI-Powered Learning, Sri Lankan Tech Talent, Computing Students Sri Lanka, AI in Education, Digital Learning Tools, Handwriting Recognition AI, Voice Recognition Learning, Emotion-Aware AI, Personalized Learning, Mobile Learning App, Inclusive Education, Quality Education, Sri Lanka Institute of Information Technology, SLIIT Computing Faculty, Sri Lankan Innovation, Youth Innovation Sri Lanka, AI Champions 2026, Sinhala Language Preservation, Diaspora Education, Sri Lankan Community Abroad, Educational App Development, Future of Learning, EdTech Innovation, Machine Learning Education, AI Research Sri Lanka, Global Sri Lankan Success Stories, Technology Leadership, Student Innovation, Sri Lankan Excellence, AI Competition Winners, Ethical AI Development, Educational Technology Solutions, Sri Lankan Youth Achievement, eLanka News

SLIIT Student Team ‘Akura’ Triumphs in Global AI Challenge

Visakesa Chandrasekaram, Gratiaen Prize, Gratiaen Prize 2026, The Son and The Lover, Sri Lankan literature, Sri Lankan English literature, Michael Ondaatje, Doris Gratiaen, Gratiaen Trust, Sri Lankan authors, literary awards, Sri Lankan fiction, contemporary Sri Lankan writers, queer literature Sri Lanka, Buddhist themes in literature, Sri Lankan novels, award-winning books Sri Lanka, Colombo literary events, Cinnamon Life Colombo, V V Ganeshananthan, Dinidu Karunanayake, Azara Jaleel, Aneesha Ansar, Alan de Costa, Ekeli Anuththara, Uvini Atukorala, Forbidden Area, Sri Lankan storytelling, South Asian literature, postcolonial literature, Sri Lankan culture, English fiction Sri Lanka, literary excellence, Sri Lankan creative writing, global Sri Lankan community, Sri Lankan book awards, award-winning novelist, Sri Lankan arts and culture, eLanka news, Sri Lankan literary heritage, books by Sri Lankan authors

Words of Gold: Visakesa Chandrasekaram Wins the 2026 Gratiaen Prize!

sri lanka vs west indies

West Indies bounce back after one-dayers to stifle Sri Lanka in the first of three T20s Bowlers step up to expose Sri Lanka batting depth. – BY TREVINE RODRIGO IN MELBOURNE. (eLanka Sports Editor).

Related News
Sri Lanka cricket, Sri Lankan cricket team, Sri Lanka vs West Indies, West Indies vs Sri Lanka 2026, T20 International cricket, Sabina Park Kingston, Jamaica cricket, Kusal Mendis, Kamindu Mendis, Dasun Shanaka, Wanindu Hasaranga, Ishad Malinga, Matheesha Malinga, Sri Lanka cricket news, Sri Lankan sports news, T20 cricket highlights, cricket match analysis, Sri Lankan diaspora, eLanka sports news, cricket in Jamaica, Sabina Park cricket ground, Sri Lanka tour of West Indies 2026, cricket highlights video, Sri Lankan cricket resurgence, international cricket, Caribbean cricket, Shai Hope, Roston Chase, Akeal Hosein, Sri Lanka batting performance, Sri Lanka bowling attack, cricket fans worldwide, Sri Lankan community news, cricket commentary, sports journalism, Sri Lankan athletes, cricket match report, cricket updates, T20 thriller, global Sri Lankan community, eLanka cricket coverage, Sri Lankan pride, cricket excellence, cricketing talent, emerging cricket stars, cricket news Australia, Sri Lankan expatriates, sports news Sri Lanka.
Articles

Sri Lanka Puts Up Strong Fight Against West Indies in T20 Thriller

UAE & Sri Lanka: A New Economic Power Couple
Articles

UAE & Sri Lanka: A New Economic Power Couple? The Trade Deal You Need to Know About!

Articles Dr. Gamini Kariyawasam

The Love Story of Radha and Krishna-by Gamini Kariyawasam

Rajitha and Misty celebrate two decades of success in Australia and in Melbourne 08
Articles Trevine Rodrigo

Rajitha and Misty celebrate two decades of success in Australia and in Melbourne “It’s been a wonderful journey in a fabulous country”, says Misty’s leader. BY TREVINE RODRIGO IN MELBOURNE.

Articles

Engaging Effectively with Refugee Communities Forum 2026 (Zoom)

  • Quick Links:
  • Articles
  • DESMOND KELLY
  • Dr Harold Gunatillake
  • English Videos
  • Sri Lanka
  • Sinhala Videos
  • eLanka Newsletters
  • Obituaries
  • Sunil Thenabadu
  • Dr. Harold Gunatillake
  • Tamil Videos
  • Trevine Rodrigo
  • Sinhala Movies
  • eLanka Newsletter
  • Photos

eLanka

Your Trusted Source for News & Community Stories: Stay connected with reliable updates, inspiring features, and breaking news. From politics and technology to culture, lifestyle, and events, eLanka brings you stories that matter — keeping you informed, engaged, and connected 24/7.
Kerrie road, Oatlands , NSW 2117 , Australia.
Email : info@eLanka.com.au / rasangivjes@gmail.com.
WhatsApp : +61402905275 / +94775882546
  • About eLanka
  • Terms & Conditions

Disclaimer:
eLanka is committed to sharing positive and community-focused stories. We do not publish or endorse political, religious, or ethnic viewpoints. The content published on eLanka, including articles and newsletters, reflects the opinions and views of the respective authors and not those of eLanka. eLanka accepts no responsibility or liability for the accuracy, completeness, or consequences of any content provided by contributors.

(c) 2005 – 2025 eLanka Pty Ltd. All Rights Reserved.