Imperial Valley Press

Sri Lanka PM: Country must prepare for new terrorism phase

- BY KRISHAN FRANCIS

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka — Sri Lanka’s prime minister on Tuesday told a parliament­ary committee investigat­ing the Islamic State-inspired Easter Sunday bomb attacks that the country should prepare itself for new types of terrorism.

Existing policing, investigat­ive agencies and laws had experience with ethnic Tamil separatist­s during Sri Lanka’s civil war, but Sri Lanka must now deal with “a new phase of terrorism,” Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe in his explanatio­n for what the government should do following criticism that the it failed to act on intelligen­ce from foreign agencies before the attacks that killed more than 250 people.

“The terrorism we see today doesn’t have a central organizati­on, there is no need to conduct classes to recruit people. People join through web sites,” he said.

He added: “A team can come and attack...or it can be done by one person if he makes up his mind to drive a lorry and kill 10 people.”

Wickremesi­nghe said that he proposed to the Cabinet and obtained a report from members to draft new laws to deal with people who travel to fight in foreign wars and who have gone to terrorist training centers. The laws will be based on British laws drafted from the 2000s until now, Wickremesi­nghe said.

“The whole existence of the internet and the web has made a big difference, this is a sort of phenomena of the last 10 years. Not only us, throughout the world, they are facing how to deal with this? Some countries have offered to help us, UK and Singapore,” Wickremesi­nghe said.

Police already knew about some suspects prior to the April 21 suicide bomb attacks at three churches and three tourist hotels but the failure to prevent the attacks was the result of the security system failing to track the transition of religious extremists into terrorists, Wickremesi­nghe said.

He said that intelligen­ce officials had gathered informatio­n before the attacks about some of the suspects and that police had evidence against ringleader Mohamed Zahran to charge him only for hate preaching under the Internatio­nal Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.

 ?? PHOTO/ERANGA JAYAWARDEN­A ?? Sri Lankan Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe leaves after testifying in front of a parliament­ary committee investigat­ing the Islamic State-inspired Easter Sunday bomb attacks, at the parliament complex in Colombo, Sri Lanka, on Tuesday. AP
PHOTO/ERANGA JAYAWARDEN­A Sri Lankan Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe leaves after testifying in front of a parliament­ary committee investigat­ing the Islamic State-inspired Easter Sunday bomb attacks, at the parliament complex in Colombo, Sri Lanka, on Tuesday. AP

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