Lodi News-Sentinel

Sri Lanka Easter bombings kill at least 290

- By Shashank Bengali

NEGOMBO, Sri Lanka — It was the first Easter since his mother died of cancer, and 11-year-old Chamod Shivan had planned to attend Mass at St. Sebastian’s Catholic Church with his father.

They would take their usual walk down a narrow road hugged by palm trees to the cozy neighborho­od church, one of dozens in this seaside Catholic enclave, and settle into the pews under whirring fans that hung from the vaulted ceiling like spiders.

But his father, Calistus Perera, had a fever and decided to stay home. Chamod went with his aunt, who lived with them and rarely missed a Sunday service.

On Monday, white streamers were strung across the road outside the family’s tidy one-story house, where mourners spilled out of the living room and onto a porch muddied by rain. Perera folded his hands as three nuns in gray habits stopped in to offer a whispered prayer for Chamod, his only child, and his 56-year-old sister, Mary Sheila.

They were among scores killed when a suicide bomber blew himself up inside the packed church, a stalwart of a Catholic community that dates back five centuries. It was the deadliest in a coordinate­d series of Easter Sunday bombings targeting churches and luxury hotels across Sri Lanka that killed at least 290 people, wounded hundreds and plunged this island nation into its gravest crisis since the end of a brutal civil war a decade ago.

“I still don’t believe it,” said Perera, 62. “In all those years of war, we never saw something like this.”

The Sri Lankan government on Monday blamed a little-known domestic extremist group called National Thowheeth Jamaath for the Easter attacks. If the group is found responsibl­e, the series of bombings would be among the first instances of Islamist terrorism in a predominan­tly Buddhist country with sizable minorities of Muslims, Christians and Hindus — and a history of communal violence.

Although no group has claimed responsibi­lity, authoritie­s arrested 24 people and said they were investigat­ing whether the extremist group — whose members have spouted hate speech and defaced religious statues but never conducted an attack close to this magnitude — acted with support from internatio­nal terror organizati­ons. Officials said seven suicide bombers were involved.

Sunday’s blasts also hit restaurant­s at three high-end Colombo hotels during breakfast, when tables were occupied by tourists on a holiday weekend.

At least 40 foreigners were among those killed, according to Sri Lankan officials. The State Department said several were U.S. citizens.

The bombings also pointed to the dysfunctio­n plaguing Sri Lanka’s bitterly divided coalition government, with Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesi­nghe blaming President Maithripal­a Sirisena and law enforcemen­t agencies for failing to act on warnings of a terrorist plot.

Rajitha Senaratne, a spokesman for Wickremesi­nghe’s Cabinet, said Monday that internatio­nal intelligen­ce agencies had told Sri Lankan authoritie­s on April 4 of possible suicide attacks targeting churches and tourist sites, but that police didn’t take precaution­s and failed to inform Wickremesi­nghe and his Cabinet.

Senaratne also accused Sirisena — who is from a different party, and tried in vain to fire Wickremesi­nghe last year over personal and political difference­s — of shutting the prime minister out of national security council meetings.

“We were not kept informed about these developmen­ts in relation to the intelligen­ce received,” Senaratne said. “We are sorry, and we apologize to the people.”

In Colombo, authoritie­s imposed a nighttime curfew for the second straight day, with the normally crowded streets and busy seaside promenade deserted after 8 p.m. Some social media sites, including Facebook and WhatsApp, were blocked by the government for a second straight day to curb what officials said was misinforma­tion and rumors that could incite violence.

Secretary of State Michael R. Pompeo went further than Sri Lankan officials, linking the attacks with the transnatio­nal violence of jihadist groups like Islamic State, although no such connection has been publicly confirmed.

Condemning what he called a “horrific wave of Islamic radical terror bloodshed,” Pompeo said the attacks showed the need to continue the U.S.-backed multilater­al campaign against Islamic State, which has been routed from stronghold­s in Iraq and Syria but whose sympathize­rs continue to carry out attacks in other countries despite President Donald Trump’s assertions that the group has been defeated.

“We are continuing to do real work against these evil human beings that went into places of worship on Easter Sunday,” Pompeo said. “The destructio­n of the caliphate was important, and it mattered, and the takedown of these threats from other geographie­s as well.

“But sadly, this evil exists in the world.”

In Negombo, the local hospital said Sunday night it had received more than 104 bodies and was treating 100 wounded. The toll ticked upward Monday as injury victims succumbed to their wounds and missing worshipper­s were accounted for in the wreckage of the church.

The bombing left the pews in splinters and sprayed shrapnel across the canary yellow walls lined with statuettes of saints. As night fell Monday, security guards stood watch over the entrance, the holes in the church’s roof visible over the treetops.

The former fishing village — now a bustling suburb of the capital of Colombo, with beach resorts that draw internatio­nal tourists — still carries the nickname “Little Rome,” a reflection of its majority-Catholic population in a country where less than 10 percent of the 21 million people are Christian.

Hundreds of roadside shrines beckon the faithful of Negombo. Crucifixes hang from the rear-view mirrors of taxis, and ichthus symbols adorn the bumpers. Some of the churches, like St. Sebastian’s, are built in the style of Portuguese settlers who began spreading Catholicis­m here in the 16th century.

The town of 140,000 on Monday was a picture of grief.

White streamers and white flags, the customary markings of funerals, fluttered in the breeze. Banners memorializ­ing the dead were posted on storefront­s and street corners and outside houses where family members waited quietly for bodies to be delivered from mortuaries.

“Deepest sympathies to Chamod Shivan,” read the banner outside Perera’s house, which had been placed there by the Catholic school where he was a sixth-grader. Chamod was pictured in his school uniform, his tie straight and hair parted.

“He was a good student, a good cricket player,” said Mewan Wanniarach­i, 45, a family friend sitting on the porch as women served trays of tea. “The whole village is shaken.”

A few doors down, Chaminda Kamal was clearing dirt in his front yard to accommodat­e chairs for the funeral for his mother-in-law, Rita Perera. The 73-year-old had been unaccounte­d for in the blast until hours earlier, when word came from the hospital that her remains had been found.

 ?? JEWEL SAMAD/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Security personnel inspect the interior of St Sebastian’s Church in Negombo on Monday, a day after the church was hit in a series of bomb blasts targeting churches and luxury hotels in Sri Lanka.
JEWEL SAMAD/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Security personnel inspect the interior of St Sebastian’s Church in Negombo on Monday, a day after the church was hit in a series of bomb blasts targeting churches and luxury hotels in Sri Lanka.
 ?? ARIF ALI/AFP/GETTY IMAGES ?? Pakistani Christians and Muslims hold candles at a tribute to Sri Lankan bomb blast victims at the Sacred Heart Cathedral Church in Lahore on Monday.
ARIF ALI/AFP/GETTY IMAGES Pakistani Christians and Muslims hold candles at a tribute to Sri Lankan bomb blast victims at the Sacred Heart Cathedral Church in Lahore on Monday.
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