The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Sri Lanka launches probe into riots, lift curfew

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COLOMBO: An investigat­ion into anti-Muslim riots that spread in central Sri Lanka prompting the authoritie­s to declare a nationwide state of emergency was announced yesterday by President Maithripal­a Sirisena.

A panel of three retired judges will probe the breakdown in law and order in the picturesqu­e hill resort of Kandy, Sirisena’s office said in a statement.

Three people died, 20 others were wounded and more than 200 Muslim-owned businesses and homes were destroyed in four days of rioting that died down on Thursday.

Eleven mosques were also damaged or completely destroyed by Sinhalese mobs, according to police who say the situation has been brought under control after a heavy military deployment.

A curfew in the district, which is 115 kilometres east of the capital Colombo, was lifted at dawn yesterday but army soldiers continued to patrol alongside police, officials said.

Sri Lanka’s Muslim minority held their Friday prayers under military protection across the island amid fears of fresh attacks.

However, the weekly religious activity went off without incident, authoritie­s said.

Hundreds of Buddhist monks and activists staged demonstrat­ions in Colombo on Friday denouncing the antiMuslim attacks and urging authoritie­s to take strong action against the perpetrato­rs.

Police said nearly 150 people, including the main instigator, have been arrested over the unrest. They named the main suspect as Amith Weerasingh­e, a man from the mainly Buddhist Sinhalese majority known for anti-Muslim activism and outspoken social media posts, and said he was taken into custody on Thursday.

The government declared a state of emergency on Tuesday as the unrest escalated when a Muslim man was found dead in a burnt-out building, a day after a Sinhalese man died of injuries sustained in an attack carried out by Muslim men. —

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 ?? — AFP photo ?? Members of the People’s Liberation Front group and Buddhist monks sit at a roadside as they hold a rally calling for calm following deadly communal violence in other parts of the country, in Sri Lanka’s capital Colombo.
— AFP photo Members of the People’s Liberation Front group and Buddhist monks sit at a roadside as they hold a rally calling for calm following deadly communal violence in other parts of the country, in Sri Lanka’s capital Colombo.

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