Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

OUTSIDE HAND Minuwangod­a

SUSPECTED IN KULIYAPITI­YA VIOLENCE

- By Kalani Kumarasing­he and Yoshitha Perera Reporting from Kuliyapiti­ya

One of them called that it was enough. But another started to run across the street, calling out for someone to give him a box of matches. They returned with a petrol can

M.T.M. Sapuwan

Police did their best to contor the situation, but the were overwhelme­d"

M. Deen

Daylight in Wayamba gives its residents the opportunit­y to assess the situation of their neighbourh­ood, following a grim and fearful start to the holy Vesak week. The Police curfew enforced early Monday (May 13) evening in the North Western Province however, prevents them from setting about their daily work.

Mob violence broke out in several parts of the country on Monday resulting in an islandwide curfew which was lifted at 4 am yesterday.

However the curfew in the North Western province remained, as mosques and Muslimowne­d shops were vandalised or set on fire by angry mobs. Tension continued to be high on Tuesday, as the overnight curfew was lifted while roads remained relatively quiet.

Despite the curfew and heightened security, in Giriulla, an outlier town in the North Western Province, several people were out and about their daily tasks, where the Police curfew was still in force. Although shops remained closed for business, men were seen travelling on bikes, with bags of rice and other rations. Some others were seen borrowing a minute or two to converse with a neighbour along the way. In inner corners of Giriulla however, the air is eerie and tense, with security personnel posted on every street. Doors and windows are firmly shut painting an eerie and grim picture in an otherwise pleasant, active town.

In nearby Kuliyapiti­ya a family is gripped with fear, after mobs surrounded their residence on Monday evening. M.T.M. Sapuwan, a resident of Karanthipo­la, Kuliyapiti­ya, was a victim of a heinous mob attack, which has left his family devastated and displaced.

A blackened frame of a two storeyed building sits under an expansive, charred Margosa tree, on the Kuliyapiti­ya - Hettipola Road, where Sapuwan lived. A warped frame of what used to be the ground-floor storefront gate bends forward precarious­ly.

“My family returned home from Wariyapola after breaking fast that day. We learned from our neighbours that the situation wasn’t good. They said several roadside eateries and shops were pelted with stones, and our neighbours asked us to remove the vehicle from our house,” Sapuwan recalled.

Together with his son, Sapuwan drove his vehicle to a friend’s place, where they parked their car, fearing the worst. Upon their return however, Sapuwan and his young son found that their house was surrounded by an angry mob of about 150 people.

“Some of them even had swords and other heavy equipment in their hands,” one of Sapuwan’s two sons, who had been observing the frightenin­g situation from the second floor of their house said.

The mobs broke into the store and started crashing the clay pots and other wares on the floor. “My son called me from the house, saying that the mobs were about to do something terrible. My other son and I had no option, but to hide in the land opposite our house, waiting for a chance to rescue my family” he said. “We called the Police, and tried calling everyone we knew to come and help us. By that time, the crowds began to slowly disperse. One of them called that it was enough. But another started to run across the street, calling out for someone to give him a box of matches. They returned with a petrol can,” Sapuwan recalled. One attacker was then heard saying that they’ve caused enough damage.

Another was heard disagreein­g, saying that Sapuwan’s home must be set on fire.

Just as they feared, the mob set fire to their store. The plastic goods immediatel­y caught fire and soon the ground floor was engulfed in flames. “My wife, son, daughter and grandchild were trapped upstairs,” Sapuwan said, adding that his neighbour managed to distract the crowd enough for Sapuwan and his son to rescue his family.

The store, full of goods to be old during the Eid festival, had at this point started to burst and spew ash. “My son called and said that they couldn’t bear the heat anymore,” Sapuwan said.

With the help of his neighbour, out of hiding and helped his son out of the house, down the volcanic staircase. Army personnel who arrived at the scene, then helped his wife and children out of the house.

“We called the Police as soon as they started attacking our house. But they only arrived at the scene when it was too late. We kept watch over our house until dawn,” the family said as they were of the view that someone would plant suspicious material inside the store,” Sapuwan said, residence. staring at the blackened remains of his

Meanwhile the Kuliyapiti­ya Urban Council’s pleas to provide the area with a fire brigade have fallen on deaf ears, according to Councillor­s. “This area has a number of coir workshops which are prone to fires. Whenever there’s an incident, we have to wait for a fire engine to be deployed from either Kurunegala or Chilaw, by which time, everything is destroyed by the fire,” one councillor said.

According to Sapuwan, Sinhales too were shocked by this incident. With water provided by the Pradeshiya Sabha, the fire was doused with help from the neighbours. But now, Sapuwan has lost everything. “It was our Sinhalese brothers and sisters who helped us, even in this situation. We don’t believe anyone from our neighbourh­ood in Kuliyapiti­ya was involved,” he added. Sapuwan’s family now resides with the

 ??  ?? PIX BY KUSHAN PATHIRAJA
PIX BY KUSHAN PATHIRAJA

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