The Maui News

As Sri Lanka mourns, IS claims bombings

- By EMILY SCHMALL and KRISHAN FRANCIS The Associated Press

Official said attack was retaliatio­n for the New Zealand mosque massacre

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka — As the death toll from the Easter bombings in Sri Lanka rose to 321 on Tuesday, the Islamic State group claimed responsibi­lity and released images that purported to show the attackers, while the country’s prime minister warned that several suspects armed with explosives are still at large.

Another top government official said the suicide bombings at the churches, hotels and other sites were carried out by Islamic fundamenta­lists in apparent retaliatio­n for the New Zealand mosque massacres last month that a white supremacis­t has been charged with carrying out.

The Islamic State group, which has lost all the territory it once held in Iraq and Syria, has made a series of unsupporte­d claims of responsibi­lity and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe said that investigat­ors were still determinin­g the extent of the bombers’ foreign links.

Sri Lankan authoritie­s have blamed the attacks on National Towheed Jamaar, a littleknow­n Islamic extremist group in the island nation. Its leader, alternatel­y known as Mohammed Zahran or Zahran Hashmi, became known to Muslim leaders three years ago for his incendiary speeches online.

The IS group’s Aamaq news agency released an image purported to show the leader of the attackers, standing amid seven others whose faces are covered. The group did not provide any other evidence for its claim, and the identities of those depicted in the image were not independen­tly verified.

Meanwhile, in an address to Parliament, Ruwan Wijewarden­e, the state minister of defense, said “weakness” within Sri Lanka’s security apparatus led to the failure to prevent the nine bombings.

“By now it has been establishe­d that the intelligen­ce units were aware of this attack and a group of responsibl­e people were informed about the impending attack,” Wijewarden­e said. “However, this informatio­n has been circulated among only a few officials.”

In a live address to the nation late Tuesday, Sri Lanka President Maithripal­a Sirisena said he also was kept in the dark on the intelligen­ce about the planned attacks and vowed to “take stern action” against the officials who failed to share the informatio­n. He also pledged “a complete restructur­ing” of the security forces.

Wijewarden­e said the government had evidence that the bombings were carried out “by an Islamic fundamenta­list group” in retaliatio­n for the March 15 mosque shootings in Christchur­ch, New Zealand, that killed 50 people, although he did not disclose what the evidence was.

The office of New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern issued a statement responding to the Christchur­ch claim that described Sri Lanka’s investigat­ion as “in its early stages.”

“New Zealand has not yet seen any intelligen­ce upon which such an assessment might be based,” it said. An Australian white supremacis­t, Brenton Harrison Tarrant, was arrested in the Christchur­ch shootings.

As Sri Lanka’s leaders wrangled over the apparent intelligen­ce failure, security was out in force for a national day of mourning Tuesday.

In the city of Negombo, Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith, the archbishop of Colombo, held a funeral service in the courtyard of St. Sebastian Church, where 110 people were killed in one of the bombings. Hundreds of military and police personnel attended the service, and nuns, priests and community members were frisked on arrival.

Elsewhere in Negombo, where soldiers stood every few feet, private memorials were held with tents set up on lawns for guests.

Also Tuesday, the military employed special police powers that it last used during a

devastatin­g civil war that ended in 2009. Among the 40 people arrested on suspicion of links to the bombings were the driver of a van allegedly used by the suicide attackers and the owner of a house where some of them lived.

A nationwide curfew began at 9 p.m.

The near-simultaneo­us bombings Sunday at three churches and three luxury hotels, as well as three related blasts, left 321 dead and 500 wounded, representi­ng Sri Lanka’s deadliest violence in a decade. The U.N. children’s agency said the dead included at least 45 children.

In some places, entire families fell victim. On Easter, as they did every Sunday, Berlington Joseph Gomez and his wife, Chandrika Arumugam, went to church at Colombo’s St. Anthony’s Shrine. And as always, they brought their three sons: 9-yearold Bevon, 6-year-old Clavon and 11-month-old Avon.

Two days later, they were all being mourned by dozens of neighbors gathered at the modest home of Berlington’s father, Joseph Gomez.

“All family, all generation, is lost,” Gomez said.

Word from internatio­nal intelligen­ce agencies that the local group National Towheed Jamaar was planning attacks apparently didn’t reach the prime minister’s office until after the massacre, exposing the continuing turmoil in the highest levels of government.

On April 11, Priyalal Disanayaka, the deputy inspector general of police, signed a letter addressed to directors of four Sri Lankan security agencies, warning them a group was planning a suicide attack.

The intelligen­ce report attached to his letter, which has circulated on social media, identified the group as National Towheed Jamaar and its leader as Zahran Hashmi, and said it was targeting “some important churches” in a suicide attack that was planned to take place “shortly.”

The report identified six individual­s likely to be involved in the plot, including someone it said had been building support for Zahran and was in hiding since the group clashed with another religious organizati­on in 2018.

 ?? AP photo ?? A view of St. Sebastian’s Church, damaged in blast in Negombo, north of Colombo, Sri Lanka, on Sunday. As the death toll from the Easter bombings in Sri Lanka rose to 321 Tuesday, the Islamic State group claimed responsibi­lity for the attacks.
AP photo A view of St. Sebastian’s Church, damaged in blast in Negombo, north of Colombo, Sri Lanka, on Sunday. As the death toll from the Easter bombings in Sri Lanka rose to 321 Tuesday, the Islamic State group claimed responsibi­lity for the attacks.

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