The television channel's news editor Ben de Pear said he finally decided to pull the team out after six men appeared at his hotel room door yesterday demanding entry.
He said the men claimed they were from the immigration police and accused the journalists of breaching their visa conditions by "attempting to enter the president's palace".
"It was an intimidating experience," he wrote on channel's website in a posting yesterday, saying the campaign of intimidation made it impossible to work.
The team was repeatedly targeted by protesters over the channel's award-winning documentary "No Fire Zone: Sri Lanka Killing Fields".
The Commonwealth summit, which ended late yesterday afternoon, was overshadowed by a row over alleged war crimes by the Sri Lankan military during the conflict against Tamil separatist rebels that ended in 2009.
British Prime Minister David Cameron threatened to push for an international inquiry into the allegations, while Sri Lankan President Mahinda Rajapaksa said he would not be pressured over the issue.
Throughout the summit, Sri Lankan ministers and senior officials consistently and publicly criticised the channel.
During its six days in Sri Lanka, the news team was stopped from travelling to a former war zone to speak to ethnic minority Tamils, who say they are still suffering four years after the war ended.
The government said it was for their own safety.
"Our phones and laptops have been monitored, our hotel was under instructions to tell the authorities every time we left, and it has been made clear to us by those who have bravely wanted to meet that many of them are then spoken to themselves," de Pear said.
In 2009 the Sunday Leader newspaper's editor, a staunch critic of the government, was shot dead near his office just outside the capital.
