Gulf Times

Lankan Muslims attend prayers amid tight security

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Sri Lanka’s minority Muslims attended Friday prayers as heavily armed troops and police guarded all mosques, including those badly vandalised in riots in the wake of the Easter terror attacks.

Police said security would remain tight over the weekend for a major Buddhist festival as well as the 10th anniversar­y of the ending of the country’s decades-long Tamil separatist war.

Clerics said some of the damaged mosques cleared out glass shards and other debris and conducted services with attendance at a high level.

“We had about 450 to 500 people,” MIM Siddeeque, the trustee of the riot-hit Kinyama mosque in the worst affected North-Western Province said.

“There were six soldiers outside the mosques and many more police at the top of the road.”

Siddeeque said his mosque was cleared of the debris, but windows, furniture and the public address system were yet to be replaced.

In the town of Minuwangod­a, the faithful packed the first floor of the two-storeyed Hujjaj mosque to pray even though repairs were yet to begin.

Local residents said Buddhists and Catholic priests were also present as a sign of solidarity with Muslims community.

Police said there were no major incidents although sporadic clashes were reported from a handful of places.

“Police are firmly in control and the situation is fast returning to normality,” a senior police official said. A nationwide night curfew was lifted on Thursday.

Security would remain tight over the weekend for a major Buddhist festival as well as the 10th anniversar­y of the ending of the country’s decadeslon­g Tamil separatist war

The riots came three weeks after suicide bomb attacks on three churches and three luxury hotels in Colombo, killing 258 people. The April 21 attacks were blamed on a local jihadi group.

This weekend Sri Lanka celebrates Vesak which marks the birth, enlightenm­ent and the passing of the Buddha over 2,500 years ago.

The most important Buddhist celebratio­n coincides this year with the country marking a decade since ending a 37-year-separatist by annihilati­ng the entire leadership of Tamil Tiger guerrillas.

The head of the Tamil Tigers, Velupillai Prabhakara­n was killed 10 years ago on May 18 while the government declared an end to the war a day later.

President Maithripal­a Sirisena and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe are due to attend several ceremonies in and around Colombo tomorrow to pay tribute to over 28,000 security personnel who died during the nearly four-decade-long war.

The minority Tamil community too is expected today to pay tribute to their war dead, including Tiger rebels at low-key ceremonies in the northeaste­rn district of Mullaittiv­u where the final battles were fought.

Army chief Mahesh Senanayake said security forces will not obstruct any war remembranc­e by the Tamils. Under the previous regime, any war remembranc­e by Tamils was outlawed.

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