The Southland Times

Death toll adjusted amid tips of more bombs

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‘‘We have rounded up a lot of suspects but there are still active people on the run.’’ Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe

Sri Lanka yesterday lowered the death toll from the Easter suicide bombings by nearly one-third, to 253, as authoritie­s hunted urgently for a least five more suspects and braced for the possibilit­y of more attacks in the next few days.

In rolling back the number of dead from 359, top health ministry official Dr Anil Jasinghe said the blasts had damaged some bodies beyond recognitio­n, making identifica­tion difficult.

Religious leaders, meanwhile, cancelled public prayer gatherings amid warnings of more such attacks, along with retaliator­y sectarian violence. In an unusually specific warning, the United States embassy in Sri Lanka said places of worship could be hit by extremists this weekend.

At least 58 people have been arrested in connection with the

wave of blasts at churches and luxury hotels last Sunday, including the father of two of the alleged suicide bombers – one of Sri Lanka’s wealthiest spice traders. Authoritie­s have said those involved in the bloodbath were welleducat­ed and well-off financiall­y.

Sri Lankan authoritie­s have blamed a local Muslim militant group, National Towheed Jamaat.

The Islamic State group has also claimed responsibi­lity, though officials are still investigat­ing the extent of any involvemen­t.

Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe said militants who might have explosives remained on the loose in the country and ‘‘may go out for a suicide attack’’.

‘‘We have rounded up a lot of suspects but there are still active people on the run,’’ Wickremesi­nghe said in an interview with Associated Press. ‘‘They may be having explosives with them, so we have to find them.’’

Police appealed for informatio­n about an additional three women and two men suspected of involvemen­t in the bombings.

The bloodshed stirred fears of more sectarian violence in Sri Lanka, a country of 23 million people, about 70 per cent of them Buddhist, with the rest Muslim, Hindu and Christian.

‘‘Sri Lankan authoritie­s are reporting that additional attacks may occur targeting places of worship,’’ the US embassy warned on Twitter. ‘‘Avoid these areas over the weekend, starting tomorrow.’’

Britain advised its citizens against travelling to the island country.

Sri Lanka’s Islamic religious affairs minister appealed to Muslims to avoid gathering for Friday prayers and urged them to pray at home. The noon prayers are the most important in the week for Muslims.

Reverend Niroshan Perera, a priest overseeing the funerals of some of the dozens of people killed in the blast at St Sebastian’s church in Negombo, just outside Colombo, said Catholic churches in the city had all closed and had cancelled mass on the government’s advice.

‘‘Little bit, we are nervous,’’ he said.

But Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith, the archbishop of Colombo, planned to lead a service on Sunday, the prime minister said. ‘‘I’ll be talking with his eminence on the security measures,’’ Wickremesi­nghe said.

Amid the manhunt, an associatio­n of Islamic theologian­s urged Muslim women not to ‘‘hinder the security forces in their efforts’’ by wearing veils.

Sri Lankan leaders have acknowledg­ed that intelligen­ce authoritie­s learned of the possibilit­y of an attack weeks before.

In the wake of the bombings, the country’s president ordered a shakeup of the security apparatus, ousting the defence secretary and demanding the national police chief’s resignatio­n.

The spice dealer under arrest, Mohammad Yusuf Ibrahim, lives in a Colombo mansion that was the site of an explosion on Sunday that killed three police officers.

Yesterday police continued to search the house, a white BMW outside covered in black fingerprin­t dust.

The prime minister described Ibrahim as a leading businessma­n active in politics and said he was known as ‘‘Ibrahim Hajiar’’, attaching the Sri Lankan term for Muslims who have gone on religious pilgrimage­s to Mecca.

Wickremesi­nghe expressed doubt about Ibrahim’s complicity in the attack.

‘‘People like that would not have wanted their sons to blow themselves up,’’ the prime minister said.

In a house on the other side of a quiet, leafy street full of mansions, Buhari Mohammed Anwar, 77, a retired teacher, said his neighbour was a nice person who helped the poor.

Of the suspected suicide bombers, he said: ‘‘Their father, Ibrahim, didn’t expect this. Their father advises them every day. But they don’t listen.’’ –AP

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