The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Security still high one week after suicide attacks

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COLOMBO: Sri Lanka’s Roman Catholic leader yesterday condemned the Easter attacks as ‘an insult to humanity’ as the tense, grief-stricken country marked a week since suicide bombers hit three churches and three luxury hotels.

The Archbishop of Colombo, Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith, held a private mass after cancelling all public services amid fears of a repeat of the bombings that killed 253 people.

A heavily-guarded vigil was also held outside St Anthony’s Shrine in Colombo at 8.45am, the moment the bomber struck the church last week, killing dozens of worshipper­s.

“Today during this mass we are paying attention to last Sunday’s tragedy and we try to understand it,” the cardinal said in a chapel at his residence, where President Maithripal­a Sirisena and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe were among the small congregati­on.

“We pray that in this country there will be peace and coexistenc­e and understand­ing each other without division,” he said.

“What happened last Sunday is a great tragedy, an insult to humanity,” he added, calling for prayers for the victims.

The Sri Lankan military is still hunting around 140 Islamic Statelinke­d jihadists, authoritie­s say, and security across the country remains high.

Today during this mass we are paying attention to last Sunday’s tragedy and we try to understand it.

At exactly 8.45am, the singing of hymns by scores of people outside St. Anthony’s church stopped and the bells tolled. The hands on the tower clock are fixed at the time of the blast.

“I come to this church every Sunday, it feels like my second home,” said Dharshika Fernando, 19, fighting back tears.

“It feels like people blasted my own home.”

Thousands of Sri Lankan troops remained on the streets, guarding churches and mosques for the symbolic day.

Security forces also carried out new arrests, a day after at least 15 people were killed in a raid on a jihadist hideout where suicide bombers blew themselves up.

Police said they arrested two top suspects in connection with the Easter bombings in central Nawalapiti­ya on Saturday night, taking the total number in detention to more than 100.

Mohamed Saadik Abdul Haq and Mohamed Saahid Abdul Haq, were on a list of six ‘most wanted’ radicals issued on Thursday.

The two men were wanted for the December 26 desecratio­n of Buddha statues at the central town of Mawanella.

That act first brought to attention the National Thowheeth Jama’ath (NTJ) group, which has been blamed for the Easter bombings.

The previous night, three men set off explosives killing themselves, three women and six children after a showdown with security forces near the eastern town of Kalmunai.

Police said three other suspected suicide bombers were shot dead by security forces outside the hideout that had been under siege for more than an hour. A civilian was also killed in crossfire.

Footage shown on state television showed explosives, a generator, a drone and a large quantity of batteries inside the converted studio. An IS flag and uniforms were also found, police said.

Sirisena used emergency powers to officially ban the NTJ and a splinter group identified as Jamathei Millathu Ibraheem (JMI) on Saturday, his office announced.

In a sign of the tensions, the reopening of schools across Sri Lanka scheduled for Monday has been put back one week. Authoritie­s have also kept up a 10pm to 4am nationwide curfew. — AFP

Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith, Archbishop of Colombo

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 ??  ?? A woman is seen during mass burials near St. Sebastian church in Negombo. — Reuters photo
A woman is seen during mass burials near St. Sebastian church in Negombo. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? Christian devotees light candles as they pray at a barricade near St. Anthony’s Shrine in Colombo a week after a series of bomb blasts targeting churches and luxury hotels on Easter Sunday in Sri Lanka. — AFP photo
Christian devotees light candles as they pray at a barricade near St. Anthony’s Shrine in Colombo a week after a series of bomb blasts targeting churches and luxury hotels on Easter Sunday in Sri Lanka. — AFP photo

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