The Borneo Post

Radical leader killed in suicide hotel attack

-

COLOMBO: An extremist leader considered a central figure in Sri Lanka’s Easter suicide bombings died in the attacks, the president said Friday as the police chief became the latest figure to quit over the failure to prevent the massacre.

With the country still on edge, heavy security was put in place for Friday prayers at mosques, but authoritie­s revised down the bombings’ toll to 253 dead from 359, saying some badly mutilated bodies had been counted twice.

President Maithripal­a Sirisena told reporters that local extremist Zahran Hashim, believed to be a key player in the attacks, died in one of the blasts at three packed churches and three luxury hotels used by foreign tourists.

“What intelligen­ce agencies have told me is that Zahran was killed during the Shangri- La attack,” he said.

He said Hashim led the attack against the hotel and was accompanie­d by a second bomber, who has been identified as Ilham Ibrahim.

Authoritie­s had been on a desperate hunt for Hashim after the government named his group,

The defence secretary (Fernando) and inspector general of police must take responsibi­lity for the security failure. That is why I asked them both to resign before I hold a disciplina­ry inquiry.

National Thowheeth Jama’ath as perpetrato­rs of the attack.

Hashim, who founded the NTJ, appeared in a video released by the Islamic State group when it claimed the strikes. He is seen leading seven others in a pledge of allegiance to the IS chief.

With the country on the defensive over ignored foreign warnings that attacks were likely, police chief Pujith Jayasundar­a became the second major resignatio­n.

Sri Lanka’s top defence ministry official Hemasiri Fernando stepped down late Thursday and the inspector- general of police has also tendered his resignatio­n, Sirisena announced, insisting that security institutio­ns must “take responsibi­lity.”

“The defence secretary ( Fernando) and IGP must take responsibi­lity for the security failure,” Sirisena said.

“That is why I asked them both to resign before I hold a disciplina­ry inquiry.”

The government has faced recriminat­ions over its failure to prevent the attacks despite receiving warnings.

Indian intelligen­ce shared several warnings about planned attacks with Sri Lankan authoritie­s, an Indian source told AFP, but the informatio­n was not given to ministers, in what Colombo has called a “major” lapse.

The military has poured troops into the streets to bolster police as they search for suspects using newly granted powers under a state of emergency.

At least 74 people are in custody so far, including a man believed to be the father of two of the bombers.

Police on Thursday released the names and photos of six wanted suspects – three men and three women.

But in an embarrassi­ng blunder they later admitted the photo accompanyi­ng the names of one of the female suspects was incorrect. The photo was in fact of an American Muslim activist.

Police say however that the name of the wanted suspect is correct.

Nationwide, security remained tight, including at mosques in the country ahead of weekly Friday prayers.

Sri Lanka’s Muslim Affairs Minister Abdul Haleem on Thursday urged mosques to cancel Friday prayers in solidarity with the Catholic church which has announced it is suspending all public services over security fears.

Muslim communitie­s have also expressed fears of a backlash after the attacks, so it was not immediatel­y clear how many people would gather at mosques for the Friday afternoon prayers.

At the Shaikh Usman Waliyullah Shrine and Masjid, a Sufi mosque in Colombo, only a handful of worshipper­s had arrived by midday Thursday.

The dead in the blasts included dozens of tourists, although it was not clear if the revised toll would affect the final toll for foreigners.

Health Ministry directorge­neral Anil Jasinghe said the “very complex nature of the human remains” had made it hard for forensic experts to initially compile an accurate toll.

Jasinghe said the mission had been a “grim task” for staff.

Several countries, including Israel, Australia and Britain, have warned their citizens against visiting Sri Lanka, in a blow for the country’s burgeoning tourism industry.

Maithripal­a Sirisena, Sri Lanka President

 ??  ??
 ?? — AFP photos ?? A Sri Lankan Muslim rides a bike past the National Thowheeth Jama’ath (NTJ) mosque in Kattankudy.
— AFP photos A Sri Lankan Muslim rides a bike past the National Thowheeth Jama’ath (NTJ) mosque in Kattankudy.
 ??  ?? Muslim devotees look out from a mosque as security personnel stand guard during Friday noon prayer in Colombo following a series of bomb blasts targeting churches and luxury hotels on Easter Sunday in Sri Lanka.
Muslim devotees look out from a mosque as security personnel stand guard during Friday noon prayer in Colombo following a series of bomb blasts targeting churches and luxury hotels on Easter Sunday in Sri Lanka.
 ??  ?? Sri Lanka’s Inspector General of Police Pujith Jayasundar­a who resigned over failures that led to the deadly Easter bomb attacks.
Sri Lanka’s Inspector General of Police Pujith Jayasundar­a who resigned over failures that led to the deadly Easter bomb attacks.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Malaysia