Eastern Eye (UK)

Sri Lanka politician arrested over ‘links’ to Easter attacks

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SRI LANKA’S police arrested a top Muslim legislator last Saturday (24) in connection with the 2019 Easter Sunday attacks that killed 279 people, as pressure mounted to speed up the investigat­ion.

Detectives took Rishad Bathiudeen, leader of the All Ceylon Makkal Party (ACMP) and a former minister, into custody under the Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA), police spokesman Ajith Rohana said.

Bathiudeen and his brother Riyaaj were arrested in pre-dawn raids on their homes in Colombo.

“They were arrested under the PTA based on circumstan­tial and scientific evidence that they had connection­s with the suicide bombers who carried out the attacks,” Rohana said.

A lawyer representi­ng the brothers said a presidenti­al inquiry had found no evidence linking them to the bombers and the arrests were a political vendetta. “The arrests are politicall­y motivated,” lawyer Rushdhie Habeeb said in a statement, which highlighte­d how the ACMP had opposed president Gotabaya Rajapaksa in 2019 elections.

The arrests came three days after the head of Sri Lanka’s Roman Catholic Church, Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith, accused the government of allowing investigat­ions to stall. Nearly 200 people were arrested within days of the suicide attacks on hotels and churches by local Islamist extremists, but no one has been charged.

Ranjith, who led commemorat­ions on the second anniversar­y of the Easter attacks last Wednesday (21), said he was “deeply saddened” by the lack of progress in the investigat­ion. He renewed his call for swift action against the perpetrato­rs and said “political posturing and the need to safeguard alliances” was hindering the probe.

Bathiudeen’s party is a member of an opposition coalition, but three of his legislator­s defected to the government in October to amend the constituti­on and give Rajapaksa wider powers over the judiciary and legislatur­e.

 ??  ?? BLACK DAY: Priests and nuns hold images of the victims of Easter Sunday attacks on April 21, 2019, in Katuwapiti­ya, Sri Lanka, last Wednesday (21)
BLACK DAY: Priests and nuns hold images of the victims of Easter Sunday attacks on April 21, 2019, in Katuwapiti­ya, Sri Lanka, last Wednesday (21)

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