Eastern Eye (UK)

BLACK DAY: REMEMBERIN­G EASTER ATTACKS

SRI LANKA CHRISTIANS HONOUR TERROR VICTIMS AMID CALLS FOR JUSTICE

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SRI LANKA’S Christians last Sunday (4) honoured the 279 killed in the 2019 Easter bombings as the island’s top Catholic leader warned of street protests unless those responsibl­e were prosecuted.

Cardinal Malcolm Ranjih lit candles at the St Anthony’s church where 56 people perished when local jihadists carried out coordinate­d suicide attacks against three hotels and three churches.

The Christian minority across the country attended Easter Sunday masses under tight armed police and military security amid fears of fresh attacks, officials said.

Ranjith renewed his call for swift action against those responsibl­e for the attack and said the then president Maithripal­a Sirisena should be prosecuted for criminal negligence in failing to prevent it.

An investigat­ion ordered by Sirisena soon after the April 21, 2019, bombings found that he and his intelligen­ce officials had precise informatio­n from India about the impending attack 17 days earlier, but failed to act.

“President Sirisena’s guilt has been identified in the commission report,” Ranjith told reporters outside the St Anthony’s church. “I ask President Gotabaya Rajapaksa and his government why they are dragging their feet without prosecutin­g him.”

“We will take to the streets if no action is taken by April 21,” Ranjith said.

Rajapaksa came to power in November 2019 promising action against those responsibl­e for the 2019 attack. Sirisena who did not offer himself for re-election is currently a legislator from Rajapaksa’s SLPP party.

Christians observed a two-minute silence from 8.45 am (3.15 GMT) when the first of seven bombers struck in the coordinate­d attacks. Each target had one bomber while at the Shangri-La hotel there were two suicide bombers.

Security was stepped up at churches across the Buddhist-majority country ahead of Easter Sunday services to guard against a repeat of the suicide bombings blamed on a local jihadist group.

Police spokesman Ajith Rohana said more than 12,500 constables were on duty outside 1,944 churches, and were backed by military. “We have also got the help the armed forces to patrol and reinforce police units across the country,” Rohana said.

Sri Lanka was shaken on Easter Sunday in 2019 when jihadists staged the largest single terror attack in the country’s history. The attack came 10 years after the end of its 37-year Tamil separatist war. At least 279 people, including 45 foreign nationals, were killed in the attacks, and around 500 were hurt.

Police checked identity cards and bags before allowing people to attend the morning mass at St Sebastian’s church north of the capital Colombo, where 115, including 37 children, were killed in the Easter attack. The names of the victims were read out after the morning mass and candles lit and flowers placed at graves near the church.

More than 200 people have been arrested in connection with the bombings, but no one has been indicted yet. Posters calling for justice were put up outside St Sebastian’s, which was packed with worshipper­s despite strict social distancing regulation­s in place due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

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 ??  ?? SECOND ANNIVERSAR­Y: A man pays his respects at the graves of the 2019 Easter attacks victims in Katuwapiti­ya last Sunday (4)
SECOND ANNIVERSAR­Y: A man pays his respects at the graves of the 2019 Easter attacks victims in Katuwapiti­ya last Sunday (4)

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