Sri Lanka launches local pornstar manhunt

COLOMBO, (Reuters) – Sri Lankan newspapers yesterday  published pictures of mainly women police said had acted in  locally produced pornographic films, part of a court-ordered  crackdown and the latest sign of growing social conservatism.

Police have identified 83 people they say have acted in the  films found on websites, and got a court order to have media  outlets publish their pictures to help locate the suspects.      “This is illegal and we need them to be identified for  investigations,” police spokesman Priyashanth Jayakody said.

The move is part of a crackdown on pornography in the  Indian Ocean nation of 21 million.

The Telecommunication  Regulatory Commission has already blocked around 100 porn sites  and police have been arresting people with porn in their mobile  phones.

Sri Lanka is a Buddhist majority nation, which also has  Hindus, Muslims and Christians, and traditional values and more  liberal social norms have generally co-existed well during its  modern history.

But there have been growing signs of conservatism. There is  a movement within a faction of President Mahinda Rajapaksa’s  government to ban alcohol, which has been resisted by the  tourist industry which stands to lose revenue as it is  rebuilding after the end of a three-decade civil war in May  2009. In March, Sri Lanka refused a visa to the  Senegalese-American R&B singer and rapper Akon to perform in  Colombo after Buddhists protested over a video in which he  appeared briefly showed scantily clad women dancing in front of  a Buddha statue.