The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Sri Lanka attack mastermind used chatrooms to sway suicide bombers

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COLOMBO: While Sri Lanka Easter suicide attacks mastermind Zahran Hashim used social media to publicly call for the death of nonMuslims, he worked for months in private chatrooms to persuade six young men to sacrifice themselves, Muslim community leaders say.

Christians and foreign tourists were badly hit in the attacks on three churches and three hotels that killed 257 people, but Sri Lanka’s Muslim community has also been badly scarred and has been looking into the background­s of Hashim and his jihadist acolytes.

Hashim, who died in an attack on the Shangri-La hotel on April 21, inspired wealthy brothers Ilham Ibrahim and Inshaf Ibrahim to join and bankroll his assault, police and fellow Muslims said.

“We suspect the two brothers used their money from the spice business to finance the bombings. It seems the indoctrina­tion was via the Internet – Facebook and YouTube,” one police investigat­or said.

Neighbours of the Ibrahim brothers said they were secretive but devout Muslims. They were not active members of a congregati­on, community leaders said.

“We believe Zahran radicalise­d these people using Facebook. Especially in the past year, he has been openly calling for the killing of non-Muslims,” said R Abdul Razik, a leader of the moderate Ceylon Thowheed Jama’ath (CTJ) group.

Investigat­ors and community leaders believe the group also used social media private messenges

We suspect the two brothers used their money from the spice business to finance the bombings. It seems the indoctrina­tion was via the Internet – Facebook and YouTube. Police investigat­or

to keep in touch without being noticed by the authoritie­s.

The CTJ and the main body of Islamic clerics, the All Ceylon Jamiyyathu­l Ulama, had alerted Sri Lanka’s security establishm­ent to Hashim and his acolytes, but said their warnings failed to get serious attention.

The Sri Lankan government has already acknowledg­ed that foreign intelligen­ce warnings about the attacks were not passed on to ministers.

“We asked the intelligen­ce agencies to take down the Facebook page of Zahran because he was polluting the minds of Sri Lankan Muslims. We were told it is better to allow him to have the page so that the authoritie­s could keep an eye on what he was doing,” Razik said.

Another moderate Islamic group, the Sri Lanka Thowheed Jama’ath (SLTJ) said it called a press conference in 2017 to warn authoritie­s about Hashim, but no action was taken.

“Zahran indoctrina­ted people using social media. He was spewing an IS brand of propaganda that somehow appealed to the bombers,” SLTJ spokesman Thawseef Ahamed told AFP.

A fuller reckoning of those involved in the attacks was only released by authoritie­s this week, revealing at least two sets of brothers. Ilham Ibrahim died at the Shangri-La hotel while his brother Inshaf Ibrahim bombed the Cinnamon Grand.

Ringleader Hashim also died at the Shangri-la, while his yet-tobe named brother blew himself up when surrounded on April 26 near the eastern coastal town of Kalmunai. He was with three widows of the Easter bombers when police and troops laid siege to the house.

Sixteen people were killed there, including six children, relatives of Hashim, and members of his National Thowheeth Jama’ath (NTJ) movement, which has since been banned.

The pregnant wife of Ilham Ibrahim, Fathima Ilham, blew herself up when police raided the family home in Colombo hours after the bombings. She also killed her two children and three police officers.

Mohamed Azzam Mubarak Mohamed has been named as the bomber who targeted the Kingsbury hotel in Colombo. His wife is now in police custody.

A fourth hotel was on the bombers’ list. The would-be attacker, Abdul Latheef, failed to set off his explosives. He detonated it a few hours later at a small motel, killing himself and two other people. — AFP

 ??  ?? File photo shows crime scene officials inspecting the site of a bomb blast inside a church in Negombo. — Reuters photo
File photo shows crime scene officials inspecting the site of a bomb blast inside a church in Negombo. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? File photo shows crime scene officials inspecting the explosion area at Shangri-La hotel in Colombo. — Reuters photo
File photo shows crime scene officials inspecting the explosion area at Shangri-La hotel in Colombo. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? Relatives are seen carrying the coffin of a bomb blast victim for a burial ceremony at a cemetery in Colombo. — AFP photo
Relatives are seen carrying the coffin of a bomb blast victim for a burial ceremony at a cemetery in Colombo. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? File photo shows Sri Lankan security forces walking past a house in Colombo where a raid occurred after a suicide blast. — AFP photo
File photo shows Sri Lankan security forces walking past a house in Colombo where a raid occurred after a suicide blast. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? A relative mourns at a burial ceremony for a victim of the bomb blast. — AFP photo
A relative mourns at a burial ceremony for a victim of the bomb blast. — AFP photo
 ??  ?? A man with a backpack is seen in Shangri La hotel elevator in this screen grab taken from a CCTV footage. — Reuters photo
A man with a backpack is seen in Shangri La hotel elevator in this screen grab taken from a CCTV footage. — Reuters photo
 ??  ?? A suspected suicide bomber enters St Sebastian’s Church in Negombo in this still image taken from a CCTV handout footage of the Easter Sunday attacks. — Reuters photo
A suspected suicide bomber enters St Sebastian’s Church in Negombo in this still image taken from a CCTV handout footage of the Easter Sunday attacks. — Reuters photo

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