Daily Mirror (Sri Lanka)

EASTER SUNDAY BOMBER MET INTEL AGENT MOMENTS BEFORE HE BLEW HIMSELF UP?

- By Ranga Jayasuriya

The political and intelligen­ce bungle leading up to the Easter Sunday Attacks is one of its kind of miscarriag­es of national duty. Much of that oversight is public knowledge, but not all of that is officially chronicled. Now the bits and bytes are being revealed before a Presidenti­al Commission that was appointed to look into the Easter Sunday Attacks.

Last week, former IGP Pujith Jayasundar­a made an explosive revelation before the commission. He said Abdul Latif Jameel Mohammed, one of the Easter Sunday suicide bombers, had met with an intelligen­ce agent 45 minutes before he blew himself up at the Dehiwala Tropical Inn lodge.

Abdul Latif Jameel Mohammed tried to explode his explosive-laden rucksack at the Hotel Taj Samudra in the coordinate­d attack on churches and hotels in the morning. But the switch of his bomb malfunctio­ned, forcing him to abort the mission. He left the hotel in a three-wheeler and arrived at the Dehiwala lodge, where he left his belongings and went to pray in a nearby mosque. He blew up later in the day though it is not known whether the bomb accidental­ly exploded while he was trying to fix it.

Hailing from a well-to-do family in Kandy, he studied aerospace engineerin­g at Kingston University, England in 20067, but did not complete the degree. He later went to Australia for studies, before returning to Sri Lanka. In 2014, he tried to travel to Syria, and reached Turkey, but failed to proceed. On his return to Sri Lanka, he was not investigat­ed by the security agencies. Unlike other common sensual states that make attempting to join a foreign terrorist group a criminal offence, Sri Lanka, as former Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe proddly paraded his folly, does not have such laws.

Latif struck at home. Officials have not revealed whether he was also used a double agent, though, he was interviewe­d by the CID at least once.

Known Zaharan’s associates such as Badurdeen Mohamed Mohideen, alias Army Mohideen, an ex-army soldier was used as an informant by the CID. The poorly-thought-out strategy effectivel­y helped terrorists to dupe the intelligen­ce apparatus into underestim­ating the nature of Islamic extremist threat.

However, the latest revelation by the former IGP was a new twist and official sources have not commented on it.

Last week, the commission reprimande­d the private secretary of the former President Maithripal­a Sirisena, and three auxiliary bishops of the Archdioces­e of Colombo for making public statements that challenged the evidence revealed before the commission. Considerin­g this as a precedent, others would likely to keep mum. Which would mean only if the commission probes into the evidence given by the former IGP and summons the relevant individual­s that the country would know the full story.

During the last two weeks, the spotlight of the proceeding­s is on ex-president Maithripal­a Sirisena. The former Defence Secretary and the IGP have alleged that the President should take full responsibi­lity for the Easter Sunday attack. Former IGP Pujith Jayasundar­a told the commission that President Sirisena instructed him not to conduct a public inquiry into Islamic extremism in the country. “Sri Lankans have died in Syria. This is an Islamic issue and it could get worse in the future. There are Muslim ministers and members in the government. They might get aggrieved. Therefore, this should be done with utmost caution.” the President told IGP. He then instructed State Intelligen­ce Service (SIS) Director Nilantha Jayawarden­e to monitor extremist activities.

President wanted Pujith Jayasundar­a to take responsibi­lity in exchange for a full pension and a diplomatic posting

Earlier Defence Secretary Hemasiri Fernando told the commission that the president instructed him to not to invite IGP Jayasundar­a to the National Security Council (NSC). Jayasundar­a, as the IGP, is also a member of the NSC, but was not invited after he fell foul with the President over a memo he wrote to the National Police Commission over the transfer of the former CID IP Nishantha Silva. That was after the Chief of Defence Staff Ravindra Wijegunawa­rdena complained at the National Security Council that Nishantha Silva was trying to arbitraril­y arrest him. The President ordered the IGP to immediatel­y remove him from investigat­ions - notwithsta­nding the President is not supposed to meddle with police transfers - which is a matter under the purview of the National Police Commission.

“Three days later, the President called me and asked who had transferre­d Nishantha. I told he did. “I did not say to transfer him,” President said and hung up the phone,” Hemasiri Fernando said.

A few days later, when I went to see the President, the latter told me, “Look what he (IGP) has done. He also wrote to the Police Commission making a reference to the Security Council.” I ordered not to bring the IGP to the Security Council.”

“Accordingl­y, I informed the then IGP Pujith Jayasundar­a of the President’s order. Senior DIG Ravi Seneviratn­e, who was in charge of the CID, was brought to the Security Council instead of the IGP.”

By then the President had already not invited Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe and State Minister of

Defence Ruwan Wijewarden­e from the National Security Council meetings, after the Constituti­onal coup in late 2018. He did not even invite Prime Minister Mahinda Rajapaksa, though he in a rush swore in the latter as the PM, triggering a constituti­onal crisis. When all the hell broke loose and the country was reeling from the Easter Sunday attacks, the President wanted IGP Jayasundar­a to be the fallen guy and take responsibi­lity in exchange for a full pension and a diplomatic posting anywhere in the world of his choice.

Critics of Yahapalana­ya have habitually blamed the tug-of-war between the President and the Premier for prolonged dysfunctio­n in the government, including the security lapses leading to the terrorist mayhem. They are right on many counts, but the national security, and by extension, the Easter Sunday attacks are not among them. The President, as the Commander-in-chief of the armed forces was in full control of national security, even to the extent he could prevent his Prime Minister, State Defence Secretary and IGP, from attending the national security council meetings. Unfolding evidence before the commission reveals a president who is jealously guarding his authority over the national security, but, seemingly not fully competent in dischargin­g his responsibi­lities. A President who is pettyminde­d, insecure and clueless of the nature of national security challenges of Islamic extremism. The NSC, a National Security Advisor and a horde of advisors and experts exist in most countries to advise the elected officials on the complex decision making on national security. However, they can do only to the extent that the leaders are willing to listen. Some leaders, especially the Third World ones have huge egos and their countries lack tradition and institutio­ns, that make them less welcoming of saner counsel. Constituti­onal provisions have not held back the president from acting in defence of national security. Nor did the 19th Amendment dilute his powers over national security, nor would the 20th Amendment would especially enhance it.

It would be the personalit­ies of the individual­s in the office that would make the difference. Then and now Sri Lankans have elected presidents they deserve.

Would the 20A - a personaliz­ed wish list for the concentrat­ion of powers of the state at hands of the executive- make national security extra-precarious under a wrong person as the commander in chief? Probably not, the current constituti­onal provisions provide enough powers for that to happen. But, it would surely make much of other areas of governance hither too protected from absolutism becoming a mirror image of the holder of the executive office.

Follow @Rangajayas­uriya on Twitter

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