Business Day

More Sri Lanka church services cancelled over fresh attack fears

Archbishop says he has had warnings

- Agency Staff Colombo /AFP

Sri Lanka’s Catholic Church scrapped plans to resume Sunday services following a “specific threat” against two religious locations after the deadly Easter attacks.

The archbishop of Colombo, Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith, said on Thursday that a “reliable foreign source” had alerted him to possible attacks this weekend.

“The informatio­n we have from a reliable foreign source is that attackers are planning to hit a very famous church and a Catholic institutio­n,” he said. He did not name the source.

SCHOOLS SHUT

He also said that Catholic schools that were due to reopen after an extended Easter vacation on Monday would now remain shut until further notice.

Sri Lankan authoritie­s had advance warnings from Indian intelligen­ce of the impending Easter attacks in which 257 people died, but police and security forces ignored them.

However, the government said all 10,194 public schools would reopen on Monday amid tight police and military security, with at least one armed guard outside each one.

“We have been assured that all schools will be searched and safe for us to resume the new school term,” education minister Akila Kariyawasa­m told reporters.

Last Sunday, a week after the April 21 attacks, all public masses were cancelled and Ranjith conducted a private memorial service for the victims that was broadcast live on television.

Armed guards have been stationed outside churches, Buddhist temples and mosques across the country since the April 21 attacks on three churches and three luxury hotels.

All political parties scrapped May 1 rallies amid fears of bomb blasts.

The cardinal has also been given several bodyguards and a large security contingent but returned a bullet-proof limousine given to him by the government. “I am not afraid. I don’t need bullet-proof vehicles to go about.

“The Lord is my protector,” he said. “But I want security for my people, and for the country.”

Ranjith said he had concerns about the progress of security operations against jihadists behind the worst single-day attack against civilians in the country’s history.

Police say they have arrested more than 150 suspects since the attacks and have accounted for all six jihadi suspects who were declared as most wanted.

Two suspects have been killed while four others were in custody, police said.

President Maithripal­a Sirisena said last Friday the authoritie­s believed there were 140 Islamic State-inspired jihadists in Sri Lanka and he had ordered security forces to track them down.

OATH OF ALLEGIANCE

The Easter attacks were blamed on the local National Thowheeth Jama’ath, whose leader was among the suicide bombers.

The group had pledged an oath of allegiance to the Islamic State group.

Meanwhile, police said Muslim clerics refused to perform burial rites for 10 Muslim radicals who were killed during a confrontat­ion with security forces last week.

Three suicide bombers killed themselves and three women and six children inside an Islamist safe house near the town of Kalmunai.

Another four people defending the house were shot dead by security forces.

“No relatives or clerics agreed to perform the final rites, so the police took steps to bury them,” spokespers­on Ruwan Gunasekera said.

The six children were spared that fate, he said.

Clerics have previously said that they would not undertake last rites for any of the suicide bombers involved in the attacks.

 ?? /AFP ?? Resting place: Relatives carry the coffin of a bomb blast victim for a burial ceremony at a cemetery in Colombo on Thursday, more than a week after a series of bomb attacks targeting churches and luxury hotels in Sri Lanka.
/AFP Resting place: Relatives carry the coffin of a bomb blast victim for a burial ceremony at a cemetery in Colombo on Thursday, more than a week after a series of bomb attacks targeting churches and luxury hotels in Sri Lanka.

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