Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Thursday, April 25, 2019

Easter Sunday Attacks: Key Updates


Featured image courtesy Reuters

April 21, 2019

A series of coordinated bomb explosions killed hundreds in Sri Lanka as they congregated for Easter Sunday mass.

As at 8.20 am on April 22, 2019, 290 were reported dead and 500 injured in the attacks.
Foreign Secretary Ravinath Aryasinha confirmed that as at 5.30pm on April 21st, 27 foreignerswere among the dead, with another five reportedly missing.

Several countries including Switzerland, the US, the UK, Canada, India and Pakistan have issued statements on the attacks. The UK and Canada have also issued travel advisories.
St. Anthony’s Church, Kochchikade was the first to be hit by an explosion, followed by St Sebastian’s Church in Katuwapitiya, Negombo and the Zion Church in Batticaloa. There were also explosions at the Kingsbury, the Shangri-La hotel and the Cinnamon Grand.

An explosion in Dehiwala killed two – the Government has not confirmed whether this attack is related.

At 3:30 pm, there was an 8th explosion in Dematagoda. STF officers entered the house wearing protective masks. Three police officers died, while 2 suspects were detained.

State Minister for Defence Ruwan Wijewardene said that 7 suspects had been arrested in connection with the bombings in Colombo, Negombo and Batticaloa, adding that “most of them” were suicide bomb attacks carried out by one group. The State has remained tight-lipped as to the identity of the group carrying out the attacks. At 8.20am on April 22nd, it was reported that a total of 24 suspects had been arrested in connection with the incidents.

Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe said that information about these attacks had been received in advance, but attempted to sidestep responsibility. “We must look into why adequate precautions were not taken. Neither I nor the Ministers were kept informed.”

This raises the question as to why, as Minister of Defence, President Sirisena did not see fit to act on the intelligence received.

Wijewardene has said that a State of Emergency will not be announced until after his meeting with the President today, on April 22. Those who are catching flights have been advised that visitors will not be allowed inside Bandaranaike International Airport. An islandwide curfew was imposed on the afternoon of the 21st, and lifted at 6am this morning.

Access to Facebook, WhatsApp and Viber has been blocked within Sri Lanka, in an attempt to stop the of misinformation. This is the second time that a block was put in place – in March 2018, violent riots in Ampara in the Eastern Province and in Digana in the Central Province led to the State blocking social media in an attempt to curb the spread of hate speech.

April 22nd 2019

A Government Analyst speaking to the media on April 22nd confirmed that the explosions at St. Anthony’s Kochchikade, St. Sebastian’s Katuwapitiya, Zion Church Batticaloa, Shangri-La, Kingsbury and Cinnamon Grand were carried out by suicide bombers. 24 persons have been arrested so far, and police believe most of them are part of a ‘radical Islamist group’.

In a press conference held later that day, Cabinet Minister and government spokesman Rajitha Senaratne confirmed that information about possible suicide attacks at Christian places of worship and tourist areas had been shared prior to the attacks by foreign intelligence and local intelligence, including with the DIG of the Special Security Division of the Sri Lanka Police. Intelligence had been shared two weeks, four days prior and even ten minutes prior to the attack, Senaratne said. He named the radical group as the National Thowheed Jamath (NTJ); all those arrested have been locals, and the government does not know if it has any international connections.

The information reflects what was carried in a letter, initially debunked as false, that was reported to have come from the IGP, warning about the planned attacks by the NTJ. No official government source has confirmed its authenticity. Minister Harin Fernando tweeted the letter publicly, while Mano Ganesan said his ministerial security personnel received intelligence on a threat one week prior to the attacks.

The rest of his press conference highlights the continued division within the Sirisena – Wickremesinghe government after the political crisis of October 2018. Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe has not been invited to a national Security Council meeting since the crisis. Following the attacks, he had invited the Security Council for a meeting, which they refused to attend. He himself therefore went to the defence establishment to join their meeting, and was kept waiting for some time before he was able to participate.

The letter containing the information on the attacks was issued from IGP Pujith Jayasundera, chief of Sri Lanka’s police, to local intelligence as well. All these institutions currently fall under the purview of President Sirisena, who is the Ministry of Defence. Constitutionally, he holds the Defence portfolio, but after the crisis last year, he ordered that the Police Department be brought under the Defence Ministry, in an extension of his executive power.

Senaratne apologised to the families of the dead and injured for the huge lapse on the part of the Government for failing to follow up on this information. However, the apology does not eradicate the government’s failure to act, and the many lives lost as a result.

The National Security Council has gone on to impose a conditional State of Emergency with articles on combating terrorism to come into effect at midnight on April 22nd. The details of these clauses and their implementation is yet unknown.

A contained blast was reported at 4.25pm this evening, when security forces personnel attempted to defuse a bomb in a van parked close to the Kochchikade church.

Funerals for the deceased have begun to take place in Kotahena and Negombo.

April 23rd

As at 9.04am on April 23rd, 310 have been reported dead, with 26 individuals arrested in connection with the incidents. The day was declared a national day of mourning for the deceased, and a 3-minute silence was observed islandwide at 8.30am.

Families, communities and clergy across faiths came together at the St. Sebastian’s church in Katuwapitiya, the site of the second blast, to perform last rites for the dead. Bodies left the church premises for burial at various cemeteries around Negombo.

While these mass burials have begun for victims of the attacks, Sri Lankan politicians continue to pass the buck ever since revelations on April 22nd that top officials had received intelligence about a possible suicide bomb threat, but failed to act.

A Parliamentary session that took place almost concurrently was a disappointing display of negligence and incompetence on the part of government officials to answer questions put before them, and take responsibility for the serious lapse in security that allowed these attacks to happen.
State Minister for Defence Ruwan Wijewardena reiterated that he and the Prime Minister were not informed of the threat, and were therefore not able to take any necessary action to prevent them. He then called for the National Thowheed Jamath to be proscribed as a terrorist organization. He also stated that the attacks were carried out in retaliation for the shooting at two mosques in Christchurch, New Zealand. No evidence was provided to support any of these claims, and Jacinda Ardern’s office has responded noting that it has not received any information to substantiate the connection.

Opposition Leader Mahinda Rajapaksa slammed the government for wasting its time ‘troubling war heroes’, after all he had done to end terrorism in Sri Lanka during his time in office. Rajapaksa’s statements reflect a rhetoric often used in response to local and international calls for military personnel to be held accountable for human rights violations during the end of the war. He also claimed that these attacks would not have taken place if Sarath Fonseka had been leading Sri Lanka’s defence apparatus.

Fonseka was arrested for treason after he unsuccessfully tried to challenge Rajapaksa in his pre-election bid in 2010 – following explosive allegations he made of human rights violations during the last stages of the war. It was President Sirisena who used his executive powers to clear Fonseka of the allegations, and who conferred him with the rank of Field Marshal.

Rajapaksa also addressed arrests made earlier this year in the North-Western town of Wanathawilluwa, where a large cache of explosives was found, and asks what happened to the individuals taken into custody. Information regarding the Wanathawilluwa explosives haul was obtained from interrogating the suspects arrested for vandalising several Buddhist statues in Mawanella area last December, and Rajapaksa linked all these incidents. At the April 22 press conference, UNP General Secretary noted that those arrested were released on bail on instruction from higher officials – another serious lapse.

Social media is now populated with photos of protests in 2017 that took place in the eastern town of Kattankudy against individuals who set off the blasts, for their hand in spreading extremism within the community. Activists also note how politicians and officials were kept notified of the threat the NTJ posed. Ministers’ claims of ignorance must not clear them for their inaction in questioning what appears to be fissures in the intelligence apparatus.

This lack of accountability among Sri Lankan lawmakers is not new, as evidenced from the constitutional crisis that took place last year.

Police units in the city of Colombo were placed on high alert for a lorry and a van suspected to be carrying explosives. This saw several offices and establishments close early, with citizens making their way home. Curfew was imposed from 9pm till 4am on April 24th.

At 4.30pm, reports broke that the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) had claimed responsibility for the attacks, via their Amaq news agency. No information or background was given to substantiate the connection between the bombers and the ISIS. As many have noted, the group has made a series of opportunistic and unreliable claims of responsibility since its loss of territory in the Middle East.

There remains no information on the provisions of the emergency regulations enacted nearly 24 hours ago, when the President Gazetted a State of Emergency. Human rights defenders are concerned that this urgency will be used to bring in regulations that impede civil liberties, which many have been pushing against for decades. These provisions are to be debated in Parliament on April 24th.

claim from Army Commander Mahesh Senanayake adds to the concern that has set in with the declaration of Emergency – that the Forces must be given more power to investigate and arrest.
President Sirisena has also declared that there will be changes affected to the heads of the security forces within 24 hours, compounding the uncertainty and fear that is growing among people.

April 25th

At a press conference this morning, State Minister for Defence Ruwan Wijewardene claimed that the bomb blasts on Easter Sunday were not carried out by the National Thowheed Jamath, but a splinter group. This follows Wijewardene’s statement yesterday that the attacks were carried out in retaliation for the Christchurch shooting. New Zealand Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern’s office has since claimed that they do not have the adequate information to link the two attacks. Wijewardene continues to make claims without providing any factual basis for them. With several reports of controlled explosions being carried out on suspicious vehicles, and in a situation where citizens feel increasingly concerned about their security, this does not inspire confidence.

Shortly after this press conference, Lakshman Kiriella noted to the media that senior officials deliberately withheld intelligence about the potential for attacks. For this statement to come from the leader of the Parliament, and a Government minister, is a continued highlight of the division between State officials and intelligence personnel.

The Sri Lankan Parliament convened to debate new Emergency Regulations that had been drafted to respond to the bomb blasts that took place on Easter Sunday. The session’s highlight appeared to be an impassioned speech by MP and Field Marshall Sarath Fonseka.

“In any other country, the entire government would have had to resign for making a mess of things like this, but it won’t happen here’ he said, claiming that security has become a joke and the military intelligence apparatus has failed this country.

The Prime Minister and the State Minister of Defence claimed that the prior information on the attacks had not reached them as they have not been part of National Security Council meetings for a long time. Fonseka raised a pertinent question; why did it take a terrorist attack, and a tragedy of this magnitude for them to reveal this? Given their duties, it is blatantly negligent for them to allow this to continue for as long as it has, and use it to attempt to evade blame in the face of a crisis.

Wijewardene’s claim that the attack was in retaliation to the Christchurch mosque shootings was also called into question. According to Fonseka, the Easter Sunday attacks were at least seven or eight years in the making, and didn’t happen overnight.

“Politician and heads of the armed forces must not wait until terrorists’ strikes to protect the country. That responsibility lies with them whether we are at war or not.” Fonseka’s speech appears to have struck a chord as it is the first instance where a representative has unequivocally stated that the country’s leaders are answerable for what happened. ’We as the government are at fault; excuses are not acceptable, we are accountable for this tragedy’; he has accepted blame in a way that no other politician has, but it is likely his speech may have been politically or self-motivated.

Addressing the blame game that has ensued since the day the attacks took place, MP Kumara Welgama noted that all 225 Ministers should take responsibility. ‘We all come here and we fight each other, we only think about ourselves and not about the country” he stated at the session.

MP of the Tamil National Alliance M.A Sumanthiran stated that those responsible for withholding the information on the attack should resign, at a minimum. By unlawfully having control over the Police Department in his charge, he claims President Sirisena has now become the first person who should take responsibility for attacks that could have been prevented.

He raises the continued attention that the Muslim community, especially those residing in the East, have drawn to the extremist activities of the perpetrators of these attacks. These warnings, compounded with the reported three warnings issued for Sunday’s attacks, calls into question Sirisena’s ability and accountability to retain his duties as Minister of Defence.

At this session, the newly-drafted Emergency Regulations were passed without a vote. Experts warn that it is an extremely draconian set of regulations; that in expanding the National Security State, adversely affect protected fundamental rights. Human rights activists and lawyers also claim that the regulations mirror the problematic draft Counter-Terrorism Bill,that has been met with widespread opposition.

Sirisena has also since kept to his deadline to affect changes in the heads of the security forces. He has asked IGP Pujith Jayasundera and Defense Secretary Hemasiri to resign from their posts. Soon after, he appointed Former Army Commander Major General Daya Ratnayake to the post of Defense Secretary, to replace Fernando.

There is little actual accountability with the removal of these two individuals from their posts. The issues that have emerged, such as the apparent divide between intelligence and government, indicates that the existing structure itself is questionable. Sirisena remains Minister of Defence, and his inaction thus far must be taken into consideration even as he makes moves to indicate that change is taking place.

The irresponsible and almost callous response to Sunday’s devastation raises issues of the effectiveness, efficiency and sustainability of measures that will be put in place to address the security situation, given that individuals are either unresponsive to authority, or wield enough authority to remain unanswerable for their failures.

To access a list of trusted sources for news on Twitter, see our curated Twitter lists:

Sri Lanka official Government accounts

Civil society

Foreign missions and diplomats

Journalists/Media

This is in addition to our own tweets and retweets on Twitter under @groundviews.

To access official government and foreign mission statements, click here.

This post will be regularly updated as the situation evolves.

SRI LANKA’S PERFECT STORM OF FAILURE

Photo: Reuters/Athit Perawongmetha)

There were many chances to stop the Easter Sunday attacks. The government missed them all.


Sri Lanka Brief25/04/2019

he horrific terrorist bombings in Sri Lanka on April 21 killed more than 300 people and injured 500 more. Sri Lankan officials have identified a little-known local group, National Thowheed Jamath (NTJ), as behind the coordinated Easter Sunday attacks, while the Islamic State has just claimedresponsibility.

There are questions surrounding exactly who sponsored this attack, but the real question is whether it could have been stopped. Although more evidence will emerge over time, the information trickling out paints a damning picture. The attacks were preventable, but compound failures let them happen. Sri Lankan authorities failed to anticipate the threat from Islamist groups with potential international networks, ignored warning signs, and failed to share information among themselves.

The bombings represent an intelligence failure of massive proportion. But a failure this big is not just confined to Sri Lanka. Jihadi terrorism is a global threat. When the networks are international, attacks in one country demand concerted action to prevent such mistakes from happening again.

At least two weeks ago, intelligence officials from India and the United States warned Sri Lankan officials about a potential plot against churches and tourist sites in the country. A week later, the Sri Lankan Defense Ministry advised the inspector general of police of the potential plot—complete with a list of namesand addresses of potential suspects, several of whom turned out to be the real attackers. Nothing was done.

Another detailed memo released by the deputy inspector general of police to several government directors, including the heads of the Ministerial Security Division, Judicial Security Division, and Diplomatic Security Division, also laid out the threat and a list of suspects.

Sri Lankan officials had also received previous warnings about NTJ from the Sri Lankan Muslim community. The vice president of the Muslim Council of Sri Lanka claimed that he warned military intelligence officials about the group as far back as three years ago.

Why did no one act on these advance warnings? Probably because the Sri Lankan government remains bitterly divided, with the president and prime minister at war with each other.
Sri Lanka is still feeling the reverberations of the constitutional crisis last year, where the president (and defense minister), Maithripala Sirisena, attempted to remove Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe from office and replace him with the authoritarian former leader Mahinda Rajapaksa.

Although this political coup failed, the division between president and prime minister continues, and control of the security services has been a key potential battleground. In an environment where information has become a political tool, and where Sirisena has taken the defense and police ministries under his own control and excluded the prime minister from the national security council, it’s hardly surprising that lower-level officials were reluctant to take action unilaterally.

Nevertheless, the various national security officials who were aware of the threat should have acted. And at least two other ministers—Telecommunications Minister Harin Fernando and Minister for National Integration Mano Ganesan—also said they had advanced warning. In a divided government, everything becomes somebody else’s problem.
FP

Violent acts that prompt a religious inquiry



25 April 2019

Reading the mind of someone practising the Islam faith would be much difficult than reading the mind of a terrorist. This could be because there are many breakaway sects of the Islam faith; each claiming purity of the religion in the way it is practised.

Now we hear of the radical group called National Thawheeth Jama’ath being blamed for the recent series of bombings. Most of these radical Islamic groups apart from fighting to claim territory also promote their versions of the Islamic faith.

We have heard of the work of radical Maulavis (Muslim priests) who have promoted a somewhat distorted form of the holy Quran. These Maulavis conducted classes for the youth and brainwashed those who came to them; influencing their minds in the process so that they become different, radical and also violent. There are newspaper reports of such Maulavis getting into arguments with members of the rest of the Muslim communities and leaving these villages afterwards. But we read about those who still operate in this manner.

  • There is enough in this island for the Muslims to cherish
  • These breakaway sectors are present in every faith
  • These Maulavis conducted classes for the youth and brainwashed those who came to them

In this context it’s important to note what a Buddhist priests aired on Sirisa television a few days ago. The priest, who was part of a discussion which featured a Hindu priest and a mawlana as well, made a request from the Muslim religious leader to have a system through which all outsiders who migrate to Muslim dominated villages can be identified. The monk said that in the Buddhist community by speaking to the father, who is a regular at the temple, the son’s details and whereabouts can be obtained. There have been occasions within the Muslim community where despite the father practising the holy Quran his sons have joined radical Islamic groups and studied a distorted form this faith.
Coming back to the radical Islamic groups operating in Sri Lanka do they leave avenues open for democracy to flourish? No such movement can gain wide acceptance if it stifles freedom in the society and forces its culture on the people
These breakaway sectors are present in every faith. But the damage done to the society has been immense with regard to the breakaway radical Islamic groups.

Take for an example the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) which organisation’s prime ambition is to gain territory. But while it spreads its violent net (ISIS operates in 18 countries) around the world it also specifies the importance of promoting a radical form of Islam which endorses violence. ISIS regards ‘Muslims who do not agree with their interpretation of the Quran as infidels or as apostates.

These breakaway religious sects may achieve their ambitious targets, but rarely have they gained wide public acceptance. But one person did in the 1940s in India which merits mention here. In 1941 Abul Ala Maududi formed the Jamaat -a- Islami organisation. The seeds to form the organisation were sown at a time during India’s struggle for freedom. All this happened because ‘India failed to discern the difference between Hindu Nationalism and Indian Nationalism. Also Indian leaders had not shelved the thoughts that the Muslims were their number one enemy. Hence the Muslims were ‘disaffected and almost disillusioned’ writes Ziya US Salam who reviewed the book ‘Religion in Critique’ in which its author Irfan Ahamed pens the journey of Maududi as a religious revolutionist.
Maududi spearheaded the forming of a movement which worked towards ‘establishing a society based on the Sharia and came to use the tools of modern secular democracy and found a place of its own.

Most radical Islamic groups promote their versions of the Islamic faith 

Democracy threatened

Another reason which prompted Maududi to form the Jamaat was the fact that the Congress could not accommodate all faiths. Another reason was that the Congress could not safeguard Muslim interests. He was as a result driven to do an in-depth study of Islam. During this time his research also unearthed the fact that ‘a lot of corruption had crept into daily lives’.

The radical Islam groups in Sri Lanka probably share some of Maududi’s ideologies which border on extremism. His teachings blame men for the degradation of women. This is because men encourage women to step out of their ‘natural space’-which is home. Maududi also termed education as poison.

 But all this poses the question whether such radical thinking also threatens democracy; a tool which has helped women evolve from being mere housewives to stateswomen and even the head of state.
Another reason which prompted Maududi to form the Jamaat was the fact that the Congress could not accommodate all faiths. Another reason was that the Congress could not safeguard Muslim interests
Coming back to the radical Islamic groups operating in Sri Lanka do they leave avenues open for democracy to flourish? No such movement can gain wide acceptance if it stifles freedom in the society and forces its culture on the people. Such religious groups can’t justify their existence if they denounce other religions and threaten peace in the society.

Though the Government of Sri Lanka gives pride of place to Buddhism, the Supreme Court regards this country as a secular nation.

There is enough in this island for the Muslims to cherish. The Muslims community may comprise just 9.7% of the total population of the country. But it has its representatives in Parliament with their own lawmakers carrying the voices of this minority community via the Sri Lanka Muslim Congress (SLMC) and the All Ceylon Makkal Congress (ACMC). Only the SLMC offered its condolences through press releases out of the two Muslim political parties regarding the Easter Sunday blasts.

But there were Muslims who wept along with the rest of the nation in mourning the dead. Whatever the religion one practises it’s important to retain that human touch. If any religious teaching disregards this we put ourselves in a very dangerous position. 
 

Sri Lanka Calls Bombers ‘Well Educated’ and Warns of Ongoing Threat


A mass funeral on Wednesday near St. Sebastian’s Church in Negombo, Sri Lanka. About 100 people were killed at the church on Sunday.CreditCreditAdam Dean for The New York Times

By Kai Schultz-April 24, 2019

COLOMBO, Sri Lanka — Nine suicide bombers from mostly educated, middle-class backgrounds carried out the attacks in Sri Lanka that killed more than 350 people on Easter Sunday, the authorities said on Wednesday as they warned of an ongoing terrorist threat and continued making arrests.

The bombers, one of whom was a woman, were all Sri Lankan, officials said. But the authorities were continuing to investigate whether the Islamic State, which on Tuesday claimed responsibility for the coordinated blasts, had provided more than symbolic support, such as by training the attackers or building the bombs.

Eight bombers struck at hotels and churches across the island on Easter Sunday. During a subsequent police raid near Colombo, Sri Lanka’s capital, a female suspect also blew herself up in front of two of her children, killing them all, along with several police officers, investigators said.

Easter Sunday Attacks Add a New Dimension to Sri Lanka’s Sectarian Tensions

The deadly attacks on Easter Sunday marked a departure from the country's sectarian tensions, with a radical Islamist group targeting Christian minorities.

The authorities said the number of people arrested had risen to 60, and that other individuals involved in the attacks remained at large. As the F.B.I. arrived to assist in the investigation, the American ambassador, Alaina Teplitz, said there were believed to be “ongoing terrorist plots,” and Sri Lanka’s state minister of defense said the danger had not passed.

“There could be still a few people out there,” the minister, Ruwan Wijewardene, said at a news conference. “Right now, we are asking people to be vigilant. Within the next few days, we will have the situation totally under control.”

Mr. Wijewardene said the leader of the attacks was believed to have been among the suicide bombers. He did not name any of the bombers, and he did not specify whether the leader among them was Mohammed Zaharan, the head of an obscure Islamist extremist group that the authorities have said was behind the attacks.
 
Anusha Kumari, center, at a burial on Wednesday for her husband, two children and three siblings, all of whom died in the Easter Sunday bombings in Negombo, Sri Lanka.CreditAdam Dean for The New York Times
 Image Anusha Kumari, center, at a burial on Wednesday for her husband, two children and three siblings, all of whom died in the Easter Sunday bombings in Negombo, Sri Lanka.CreditAdam Dean for The New York Times

“They’re quite well educated people,” Mr. Wijewardene said of the attackers. “We believe that one of the suicide bombers studied in the U.K. and then later on did his postgraduate in Australia before coming back to settle in Sri Lanka.” He said the bombers were from different parts of Sri Lanka, but he did not elaborate.
Officials said they were still trying to determine whether the attackers had links to the Islamic State. The terror group, also known as ISIS or ISIL, has released a video showing Mr. Zaharan leading masked, black-clad disciples as they pledged allegiance to the organization.

The Islamic State has not provided any further proof for its claim of responsibility, and Mr. Wijewardene said investigators were trying to determine whether the group had provided training or financing for the attacks. He said they had found no evidence to suggest that the bombers had traveled to the Middle East to fight for ISIS.
 
Outside the Kingsberry Hotel in Colombo, which was bombed on Sunday.CreditAtul Loke/Getty Images
Outside the Kingsberry Hotel in Colombo, which was bombed on Sunday.CreditAtul Loke/Getty Images
 
The bombings Sunday occurred nearly simultaneously at three churches and three hotels. In the last couple of days, security near the bomb sites has tightened. Schools have been shut until Monday, and the postal department is requiring that items sent by mail be wrapped in front of workers at post offices.

The police said they found a “suspicious bag” at a restaurant in the city of Negombo, near St. Sebastian’s Church, where around 100 people were killed on Sunday. The bag was destroyed on Wednesday in a controlled explosion.

Many mourners on Wednesday focused their anger on the government and the security forces, as grief morphed into rage. All morning long, people gathered near St. Sebastian’s Church in Negombo to mourn the deceased at a mass burial.


Delcia Fernando with the body of her husband, one of the hundreds killed in the bombings, in Colombo on Wednesday.CreditAtul Loke/Getty Images

One distraught woman could not stop crying and shouting at the police. She blamed them for not acting on prior intelligence warning of the attacks.

[Read more on the victims of the attack, including families celebrating the holiday and newlyweds toasting their new lives.]

An Indian security official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity, said India had interrogated a man last year who was linked with ISIS, and who said he was inspired by Mr. Zaharan’s videos on social media. That intelligence prompted an investigation into Mr. Zaharan, and it was part of the context for an April 11 warning that the Indians sent to the Sri Lankan authorities about the possibility of church bombings.
 
St. Anthony’s Shrine in Colombo, another bombing site, on Wednesday.CreditGemunu Amarasinghe/Associated Press

St. Anthony’s Shrine in Colombo, another bombing site, on Wednesday.CreditGemunu Amarasinghe/Associated Press
The warning was never relayed to church officials, and the Sri Lankan authorities apparently took no action against members of Mr. Zaharan’s group, despite specific information provided by the Indians.
The Indians repeated the warning just hours before the bombings, telling the Sri Lankans that an attack was imminent, according to an Indian official.

During a national address on Tuesday, President Maithripala Sirisena tried to deflect criticism that he was at least partly responsible for the security failure. He acknowledged that “there was an intelligence report about the attack” but said he was “not kept informed” about it by his subordinates.

On Wednesday, Mr. Sirisena asked Hemasiri Fernando, the defense secretary, and Pujith Jayasundara, the inspector general of police, to resign, according to a senior official at the president’s office. A lawmaker, Wijedasa Rajapakse, called for the two security officials to be arrested and prosecuted.
Many lawmakers dismissed assertions that the president would not have known about the threat memo, saying that blame for the security lapse should go all the way to the top.

Sarath Fonseka, a member of Parliament who was an army chief in the last stage of Sri Lanka’s civil war, told Parliament on Wednesday that he knew about the memo, as did the national intelligence chief. He said it was “obvious that the letter would have gone to the president.”
 
Reporting was contributed by Mujib Mashal, Dharisha Bastians and Aanya Wipulasena from Colombo; Austin Ramzy from Hong Kong; Adam Dean from Negombo, Sri Lanka; and Suhasini Raj from New Delhi.

Everyone agaimst to the statement made by Defense Secretary


LEN logo(Lanka e News - 24.April.2019, 3.30PM)  People of Sri Lanka learns that president Sirisena’s fourth defense secretary Hemasiri Fernando should resign from his post and leave the country for giving an idiotic statement before a foreign media without taking any credible action to prevent the brutal attack of the terrorists despite getting information just before ten minutes of the attack which caused 321 deaths and 620 wounded. From the statement this idiot gave one can comprehend that he is with zero knowledge of defense and national security.
When the foreign reporter inquired about tourist hotels this idiot defense secretary said that they did not provide security for hotels even during war times because hotels are profit making companies and they should deploy their own security and the government will not provide any security for hotels even in future.
It’s amazing that he made these statements not before the local reporters but before a foreign reporter. The serious concern is if a countries defense secretary is making such a foolish statement, the foreign countries would assume that it is a statement of the government and not his personal opinion. From that idiotic statement the foreign countries would never trust our country and our security.
The countries economy is just starting to breathe following the October 26th political conspiracy. Following this brutal explosions the tourist industry of the country is at its last stage of death, at a time when foreign tourists starting to some and following this idiotic statement of the defense secretary the tourist industry have to find its own coffin. The government needs to remove such idiots from top positions who speak without response
When the foreign reporter questioned why you couldn’t give security to churches despite information this lunatic defense secretary said how we can give security to all churches. We received information but we never thought the terrorists would do such a large attack. We thought there would be isolated incidents here and there. It appears that this defense secretary is an illiterate person as a nincompoop who knows nothing about criminal and preventive defense.
Although Lanka e News reported with photograph that this defense secretary Hemasiri Fernando was in associate with the drug kingpin Wele Suda, the government did not take any notice of that. From the yesterdays statement the defense secretary has proved that he is a stupid fool.
If president Sirisena and his fourth defense secretary resign themselves and leave the country with the money they earned the people can find someone else who can save the country.
By a special correspondent
Translated by Robinhood
videofootage below 
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by     (2019-04-24 11:05:23)

The Outpouring Of Grief And Solidarity With Sri Lanka Over The Easter Tragedy

We need to criticise ideas, not individuals or their religions

by Victor Cherubim-
 
Sri Lankans like every other small island nation people are a happy go lucky people, want to live and let live, with a Buddhist way of a life of tranquillity and inner sereneness. We have been blessed with beautiful golden sandy beaches,with fauna, flora and an idyllic sunny climate all year round. This is the envy of the many who visit our shores in their thousands, in search of an escape from troubled waters and times.
 
But over the recent many years, our paradise isle has been the scene of civil war, the tsunami,the drought, the flood of drugs and imported debt mountain and a wanton destruction of everything we have aspired.
 
Having had the resilience to overcome most of our man made difficulties with the wisdom of following in the footsteps of the Middle Path of The Triple Gem and with the courage to lead our way out of trouble, we have now stumbled into becoming embroiled in international terrorism, due to our genuine innocence of understanding the machinations of international power rivalry.
 
New Zealand vs Sri Lanka?
 
What have the recent atrocities in New Zealand committed against humanity got to do with what happened days ago on Easter Sunday in Sri Lanka?
 
Not long ago,I was in a discourse with a friend of mine about my childhood in Sri Lanka. He said, " you never had it so bad when you were growing up in Colombo,did you?" "You see", he said, " was it not peaceful". So what has really happened to make this sea change over the last fifty odd years, I contemplated.
 
I can remember my mother buying China silk from the Chinese merchant peddling down our lane on his bicycle on a sultry afternoon.
 
I can remember the Indian Shastri wanting to read my palm,to see if I would ever get rich?
 
I can remember the Seer fish monger and the "elo wollo" ammah selling their produce to my Mum, with accounts scribbled on a Note Book.
 
What has changed?
 
Have we,as Sri Lankans changed,or has the world changed? "We might live in an age of moral outrage, but plenty of research shows that calling someone a terrorist, someone racist,homophobic, sexist or any other label does nothing to change people's beliefs. This is because naming,shaming,or blaming people will automatically put them on the defensive".
 
It is extremely difficult to change the world or even our workplace.This is because bias is a human condition. Stereotyping and unequal treatment persist, because when bias motivates an unlawful act,it is considered a hate crime. Hate today around the world wears many faces,not only under burquas and hjabs. Hate is an open attack on tolerance and acceptance of people as human.
 
How much has changed and how much as remained the same?
 
Experience shows that no country in the world is an "island", able to create opportunities for its population entirely within its own geographical boundaries. To succeed in this open environment Sri Lanka will need to improve its skills base,better understand the supply and demand chains as well as produce higher quality goods and services.
 
We have remained the same as an agricultural export nation. We have remained the same depending on our tourist trade to bring in the revenue. We have exploited our scenic beauty and at the same time invited trouble. Yet as someone who visited Sigiriya recently stated, there are no proper tourist toilets available as yet.
 
How can a relapse into violent conflict be prevented in our land, if we tell the whole world that our Police were privy to intelligence given to us in advance of the Easter massacre,while our Security Services were kept in the dark. Was there a conspiracy hatched by interested parties for self gain?
 
Besides, winning the peace remains a much greater challenge.Many of the underlying issues remain unresolved,making our Opposition Leader,Mahinda Rajapaksa, reported to have stated, that if he is returned to power, he will release all the Tamils detained without trial, languishing in prison for nearly ten years at great expense to their families and to the economy.
 
We run to the international community for help in conflict resolution, but we all know in our hearts that it is not the international community or society involved in conflict prevention. We as a nation must stop the infiltration of international hate crime in our island.
 
Sri Lanka we say, has experienced improvements in political rights and civil liberties since 2015. However, the Government is divided and slow to implement "transitional justice" mechanism needed to address the ongoing issues.
 
What must we do now?
 
We speak of encounters in our churches, in our hotels, in our streets. No matter the location, or relationship, the stories echo each other. After eight incidents leaving the nation in a state of shock as well as an outpouring of grief and solidarity worldwide, we need to act immediately to restore confidence in our people for their safety and security.
 
We need to criticise ideas, not individuals or their religions. We need to commit to learning, not debating in Parliament. We need to share information, to maintain focus and flow. We need to be inclusive rather than exclusive

In the tropical terrain, tourism thrives, but!

 Tourists at the Udawalawe National Park – Pic by Shehan Gunasekara
logo Friday, 26 April 2019

In business school an oft repeated refrain in the marketing module is ‘get your product right’. It’s a task easier said than done, especially when it’s a service. Marketing of a service characteristically has to negotiate both lucidity and ambiguity alike. Additionally intangibility reigns which is another challenge. The whole product development process from conception, consultation, and construction to commercialisation involves many processes that involve little or no corporeality. This is the context and it’s up to the people involved to generate the true reality by summoning the collective genius.

Sri Lankan tourism has done well. All that’s happening augers well for the country. The billion dollar question is will Sri Lanka get it right this time or will political bungling cave in? Natural and sensible question as politics and politicisation are such an integral part of the national idiom. Sri Lanka’s travel industry always had to suffer the fallout of political crisis and political bungling. Uncertainty and instability is always bad news for the industry and this leads if not prompts a knock-on effect namely cancellations, media distortions, etc.

A product or service is an embodiment of many factors. It ranges from the core product, actual product and the augmented product. Sri Lanka has it all and it’s still work in progress. Each element having multiple levels both concrete and fluid. All of this happening in a dynamic, evolving socio-economic milieu and in need of constant management reach, input and control. A vibrant private sector is doing much, additionally new faces from the private sector to hey government institutions vis a vis tourism is a good sign.

Leadership is a powerful word. If properly identified and allowed to settle it would flourish. Great leadership could move mountains and an entire metamorphosis evinced. Leadership has nothing to do with seniority or political affiliation. It has nothing to do with hierarchy or titles. It has nothing to do with personal attributes or qualifications. It has everything to do with impeccable social and people skills with a ton of common sense.

This is the need of the moment for the tourist industry of Sri Lanka, getting the right people to propel the economy with a major thrust. People drive people and extraordinary people do extraordinary things.

Marketing a nation

Marketing a nation, destination in its over-simplified version is the process of promoting a place with the purpose to increase the number of visitors to that particular destination. What’s conspicuously lacking here are the dimensions, dynamics and deliverables that strongly weigh in. Sri Lanka is certainly much more than scenic attractions, the narrative must be constantly evolving, reinventing, and reimagining. Its people, passionate people, people from the private sector who can deliver.

Building the product essentially uses design requirements typically generated from feedback from customers. In the case of Destination Marketing the good, bad and the ugly must be embraced and dealt with in a meaningful manner. In this hyper social media dominated world bad news travels very fast. A holistic approach with public private collaboration will certainly go a long way.

Changes effected over a period gradually build a better product to the point of delighting the customer. These incremental changes produce a higher-quality and better performance translated into authenticity, credibility, satisfaction, value for money, safety, etc.

The civil war is over, countries have lifted travel adversaries, accolades for the idyllic island pouring in. 10 years of permanent peace has done wonders to the country. Shine Sri Lanka. The Island nation is basking, scintillating, bedazzling. Named best country in the world to visit in 2019 by Lonely Planet. A single most honour. It’s time to concretise the process.

Many a board room in the industry perhaps bustling with people and ideas. Investments pouring in and churning much needed employment and earning much wanted foreign exchange.

Marketing ‘Destination Sri Lanka’ no doubt a shared responsibility. It has to be a collaborative effort. Every concerned body, authority must function as a single cohesive unit. All ministries connected with the industry and professionals must strengthen the effort and extend all support. Trade missions too have a huge responsibility.

In Canada where this writer lives The Canadian Tourism Commission (CTC) Canada’s national tourism marketing organisation is a Federal Crown Corporation wholly owned by the Government of Canada. This entity leads the Canadian tourism industry in marketing Canada as a premier four-season tourism destination where travellers have access to extraordinary experiences. They extend a consistent voice for Canada in the international tourism marketplace. Their undisputed vision is to inspire the world to explore Canada.

Canadian Tourism Commission collaborates to promote Canada’s extraordinary experiences in 11 countries around the world, conducts market research, offer stunning visuals through the Brand Canada Library and provides resources to help industry leverage Canada’s successful tourism brand, ‘Canada Keep Exploring’. Canada’s tourism industry includes approximately 160,000 tourism-related businesses and contributes some 800,000 permanent jobs to the Canadian economy. The ultimate beneficiary of the CTC’s activities is the Canadian taxpayer, who enjoys tourism’s contribution to the quality of life in Canada through public and private investments in parks, transportation infrastructure, attractions, events and event facilities.

Statistics Canada – Sri Lanka’s equivalent of Department of Census and Statistics says international tourism set an annual record during Canada 150 years in 2017, with 20.8 million tourists visiting Canada. The overall figure surpasses the previous record of 20.1 million set in 2002.

It’s all about getting the product right and making constant and continuous developments. It’s basically working on the five A’s: Attractions, Accessibility, Accommodation, Activities and Amalgamation. Sri Lanka is blessed with attractions. Product Sri Lanka, enchanting, experiential and engrossing. The tropical terrain triumphantly talking and touting. Charming landscapes, gripping mountains, verdant forests, emerald tea gardens and blue beaches. Truly breathtaking.

Island nation is smiling again after a prolonged period of agony, anguish and perpetual melancholia. The ravishing view Nuwara Eliya and its surrounding plantations, waterfalls and mountains. The Pinnawalla Elephant Orphanage, Udawalawe National Park, Yala National Park, Mihintale, Unawattuna, Mirissa, Arugam Bay and many more provide the discerning traveller something to remember and cherish. Nothing of this is created but truly natural and of great value.

Roads, trains, ferries, airports – key for development of tourism

Roads, trains, ferries, airports – these are key for development of tourism. Also facilities for special needs steadily improving in developed economies. Buildings and public spaces that provide lifts and ramps for wheelchair access are becoming more common. Buses in Canada are all accessibility enabled. This is a lucrative demography not to be overlooked.

As for accommodation it seems a lot is happening in the country. New hotels sprouting and changing the skyline, attractions growing, activities growing. A visible takeoff of sorts. This time it looks as if the takeoff is a major one. Definitely with political sanity the country could march forward.

What does present tourist arrival figures convey? The Indian segment has improved exponentially it seems. Special emphasis to the behemoth neighbour is paramount. This is the home run. India continued to be Sri Lanka’s top source of tourists in 2017 with a near 8% growth in arrivals, 384,628 arrivals (up 7.8%) followed by China with 268,952 (down 1%) and UK 201,879 (up 7.3%). Sri Lanka has still scratched the surface of the Indian market.

Improving incomes and living standards is happening at a phenomenal rate for the Indian people. A 2016 study found that, the middle class has more than doubled in size from 2004 to 2012 to 600 million people. This is twice the total population of the US and not based on purchasing power. A 2007 study from the McKinsey Global Institute, which called India a ‘bird of gold’ because of its expanding consumer market, didn’t expect the middle class to reach nearly half the population until 2025.

What is 400,000 from a total market potential of 600 million? It’s not peanuts more likely mustard seeds. More work needs to done in this very important segment. This should give you just some idea of how the Indian economy is moving at lightning speed. The E-commerce market is fuelling a lot of that growth.

Every visitor who arrives in Sri Lanka wishes to get back in one piece and with many pleasant memories. No amount of advertising can replace the personal experience of people. This is a no-brainer.

A recent experience of utter horror of an affluent Indian businessman on holiday in Sri Lanka with his family and relatives had expressed absolute bitterness over, what they termed, a ‘harrowing experience’ during a stay in a bungalow in Nuwara Eliya. “It was a nightmare,” protested Gopal Kamath. He was robbed, lost Indian rupees 250,000, gold jewellery and two passports. This is the very kind of news Sri Lanka should avoid. The Minister in charge and the relevant authorities must do more to reassure the tourists that these kinds of things will not happen. Law enforcing agencies too must take cognisance of this kind of activity and fully ensure that the law is enforced well and culprits apprehended.

Who Is The Mastermind Behind The Easter Sunday Massacre?

Latheef Farook
Who is the mastermind behind the Easter Sunday massacre? Why carnage was not prevented despite prior information?
logoThe Horrifying / Inhuman April 21st attacks should not be seen merely attack on a specific religion at this time. Rather the attack is on the very heart of the county’s plural, multi-ethnic social fabric. There has been no history of violent animosity between Muslims and Christians. However, over a period of time both communities have been targeted by few radical Buddhists on multiple occasions. They were both victims of the violence but never responded. Had the bombers targeted state institutions, places of entertainment, Buddhist temples or even Hindu kovils, it would have made sense in terms of vengeance for a real or imagined wrong.  
Sri Lanka’s Muslim community which suffered immense during the three decades of ethnic conflict and help save the unity of the country is deeply disturbed in view of the   involvement of an insignificant Muslim group in the devastating April 21 attacks.
The alleged involvement of National Thowheeth Jama’ath (NTJ) and the media coverage started causing serious concern among Muslims who were already under attack by racist mercenaries.  Without any provocations Muslims were attacked, looted and their properties including mosques were burnt causing billions of rupees of lost depriving their livelihood during attacks in Central hills in March 2018. 
These attacks remain fresh in their minds though the perpetrators were yet to be tried and brought to book. One of leaders of this carnage was released when former President Mahinda Rajapaksa was sworn in as prime minister. This is the state of affairs in the country where Muslims feel ignored and discriminated by the pro-western Maithri-Ranil government.  
There are clearly external interests working in collusion with local political actors in order to divide, distract, rule and advance external geo-strategic interests in this strategically located country at this time. External parties have geopolitical interests in Sri Lanka to divide, distract, loot and set up military bases in the island as there is a cold war and increasing militarization of the Indian Ocean.  RSS and BBS emerged in the post-war period, the former a Hindu organization and the latter a Buddhist outfit in the predominantly Tamil northeast and Sinhala Buddhist South, seemingly also targeting Muslims and Christians. 
Meanwhile questions were also asked why the bombers who bombed leading the hotels starting from Cinnamon Grand to Kingsbury did not bomb the Indian owned Taj Samudra hotel. On the other hand how come the Indian media and even Indian politicians knew more about bombings than the local media and local authorities? Furthermore, the intelligence shared by Indian RAW with the Sri Lankan authorities about possible attacks almost two weeks before the incident / release of identities of the Suspects and their ideologies gives credence to the suspected role of Indians deep state . It is also noticeable that if the attackers successfully targeted renowned Catholic Churches why they did not attack Indian High Commission which was also target of the terrorists.  
This reprehensible crime cannot be done by handful of undesirables from Dematagoda or Sarikamulla as it proved a very well coordinated sophisticated crime meticulously planned and executed within 20 minutes. The authorities have pinned the blame for the attack on an obscure group “National Thowheed Jamaath (NTJ). The group has multiple links to foreign countries. The links to foreign countries appears to hold the key to determining who is really behind the attacks. Therefore, due to NTJ’s foreign links, it is highly likely that a foreign entity, most likely a foreign state or state intelligence agency was behind the attacks and that the men on the ground who have been captured are merely pawns in a much larger and even more dangerous game. 
Questions were also raised why the government failed to act promptly and to stop the attacks thus could have saved innocent lives. That is the first thing that any responsible government would do as innocent peoples’ lives were involved.
President Sirisena was to appoint a special investigating panel to ascertain information on this carnage while Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe   said investigations would be launched to ascertain why a prior warning about the attack had been ignored.
Shameful state of affairs was such that Minister Harin Fernando tweeted the image of an internal memo and report by the police intelligence of a terror attack to be carried out by so called NTJ.
“Some intelligence officers were aware of this incidence. Therefore there was a delay in action. What my father heard was also from an intelligence officer. Serious action need to be taken as to why this warning was ignored. I was in Badulla last night,” the minister tweeted.
The letter signed by the DIG, dated on April 11 was addressed to a number of key officials in the security services including the Directors of the Ministerial Security Division (MSD), Former Presidents’ Security Division and the Ambassadors Security Division.
The letter titled “Information of an alleged plan attack” said the state intelligence services had received information from a foreign intelligence service to the effect that National Thawheed Jamath Leader Mohammed Zahran was about to launch a suicide bomb attack in Sri Lanka targeting famous catholic churches and the Indian High Commission.
In the letter, the DIG requested the concerned authorities to pay attention to the information and to beef up the security provided to VIP personnel and to the locations.
Government spokesman Rajitha Senaratne told reporters that there had been “several warnings from foreign intelligence agencies about the impending attacks”.
Now the question is what the use of special investigation panel and investigations after the damage was done and innocent lives were lost.
Such a calamity was not something unexpected. About eight months ago in October last year I highlighted a potential threat to communal harmony   in an article. This is what I predicted; 
“The island’s growing ties with Israel have become cause for serious concern among the discriminated Muslim community which always feared that this may spell disaster for communal harmony in view of Israel’s centuries old vicious hostility towards Islam and Muslims. This fear emanates from Israel’s long record of hostility towards Muslims and its crucial role in the United States led western global campaign demonising Islam and Muslims under the guise of fighting a war on terrorism. Today it is common knowledge that Israel and India under Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s BJP’ / RSS, operate hand in glove against  Muslims in India and the region as well.

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