A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Saturday, May 11, 2019
An Enigma Of Easter Sunday Bombings In Sri Lanka
The Easter Sunday self-inflicted tragedy was in military parlance a total command failure, which is likely to take Sri Lanka a decade back
Neither Sherlock Holmes nor Alfred Hitchcock would have been mystified
by intelligence oversights that led to one of the world’s most dastardly
terrorist attacks in Sri Lanka last month. Simply because it was a case
of just connecting the dots — so detailed and specific were the
tip-offs. According to a top secret intelligence memo of April 9 (there
were two others before the fateful day dawned on Easter Sunday), the
country’s intelligence chief had warned the Inspector General of Police
that “Zahran Hashim of the National Tawheed Jamaat and his associates
were planning to carry out suicide terrorist attacks in Sri Lanka
shortly.” How this classified warning was not shared with President
Maithripala Sirisena and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe is a
riddle. Rarely has there been an intelligence goof-up of this magnitude
in recent memory.
That such a catastrophic intelligence foul-up took place in Sri Lanka,
which only a decade ago had destroyed the invincible Velupillai
Prabhakaran-led Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE), ending root and
branch a 30-year-long deadly insurgency and becoming the first country
to achieve such a feat in the 21st century, is intriguing. The Army,
Navy and Air Force have held annual international seminars in Colombo to
showcase their military successes, including the Army’s prowess in deep
penetration intelligence acquisition skills. According to the then
Defence Secretary and brother of former President Mahinda Rajapaksa,
Gotabaya Rajapaksa, now a presidential hopeful for the elections this
year, the present Government dismantled the elaborate intelligence and
surveillance network of 5,000 personnel he had set up in 2011 across the
country, including the Muslim majority areas of the east.
Nine suicide bombers, including one woman, struck in coordinated attacks
followed by two or three hara-kiri acts by family members and
associates of the mastermind Hashim. It is now known that the suicide
squad consisted of 15 members and the support group was 150 of whom 100
cadres have been arrested. Thirty-six Sri Lankans are reported to have
gone to fight with the Islamic State in Syria and many had returned. The
preparation for serial human bombing of this scale and sophistication
would have taken months if not years. Sirisena has revealed that
planning for the attacks started in Syria in 2017. How this massive
diabolical plot escaped detection is a mystery. The Sri Lankan Army
Commander, Lt Gen Mahesh Senanayake, in an interview to BBC, has said
that the suicide bombers “got some sort of training” in Kashmir and
Kerala. This should worry India. Given the severe communal polarisation
exacerbated by the elections, major terrorist attacks are not unlikely
in India in the near future.
In 2017, I retraced my times with the Indian Peace Keeping Force (IPKF)
30 years ago in the east, travelling through Muslim majority Ampara and
Kalmunai areas near Batticaloa and saw an increased density of
population, mosques and madrassas as also prosperity and development.
The Muslims were targeted by the LTTE notably in their massacre in Sri
Lanka’s biggest mosque in Kattankudy near Batticaloa in the 1990s.
(Kattankudy is the hometown of Hashim, the mastermind of the attacks and
its training ground). Later, the Sinhala Buddhist extremists Bodu Bala
Sena (BBS), ostensibly supported by the Government, targetted Muslims
periodically from 2013, culminating in the big anti-Muslin riots in
Kandy last year, which led to the Government declaring an Emergency. The
trigger for Muslim alienation and radicalisation is the BBS attacks and
objections to hijab and halal. How the Government did not pick up these
straws in the wind is an enigma.
Initially, the Government ascribed the horrific attacks to the Islamic
State (IS)-inspired Sri Lankan Muslim National Thowheed Jamath (NTJ) as
retaliation for Christchurch till IS supremo Abu Bakr Al-Baghdadi
claimed responsibility as revenge for loss of Baghouz, the caliphate’s
last bastion in Syria. Sri Lanka’s own counter-terrorism czar, the
Singapore-based Rohan Gunaratna, confirmed that IS has created support
groups around the world and NTJ has joined the IS.
The rift and infighting between Sirisena and Wickremesinghe is a
folklore. The politics of the carnage is beguiling. Sirisena has
squarely blamed the Prime Minister, the Defence Secretary and the
Inspector General Police and said he was kept in the dark and that he
would reconstitute security structures. On his part, Wickremesinghe
said, “I did not know…still we have to take responsibility for that part
of Government machinery that did not work.” Sirisena is not only the
Defence Minister but has also kept the Law and Order Ministry with him,
some say, unconstitutionally. This has kept Wickremesinghe quarantined
from defence and security, including national security council meetings.
That the left hand did not know what the right hand was doing is the
black hole in the security system.
Former Army Commander General Sarath Fonseka was the key architect of
victory of the LTTE but he fell out with the old regime’s top leaders,
the Rajapaksas. The Sirisena Government appointed Fonseka a Field
Marshal and a Minister. Speaking in the Emergency debate in Parliament
after the bombings, Fonseka lambasted his own Government, including
Srisena, Wickremesinghe and other defence and intelligence officials.
Demands for making Fonseka Minister for law and order are increasing.
Sri Lanka is under Emergency rule with the Prevention of Terrorism Act
in place but is likely to be replaced with the new counter-terrorism
Bill. It is the first country to ban the face veil in South Asia. Both
the curfew and ban on social media were lifted after a week. The
preliminary report on the bombings has been completed, which Sirisena is
keeping close to his chest. A new military command territorially,
including parts of west and northwest provinces, including Colombo and
Puttalam and strangely called Overall Operational Command, has been
established and coastal security beefed up. India’s offer of sending its
elite National Security Guards has been politely rejected. The joke in
Colombo is about how NSG messed up in Mumbai in 2008 taking four days to
complete the operation. Tongue-in-cheek Sri Lankan military veterans
say what the IPKF started and did not complete, we finished.
Over-indulgent in its conquest of LTTE, Sri Lanka let its guard down. A
dysfunctional cohabitation Government has been rent apart by
catastrophic terrorist attacks, which are likely to take Sri Lanka a
decade back. The Easter Sunday self-inflicted tragedy was in military
parlance a total command failure. That neither the Prime Minister nor
President has resigned is to borrow a famous war time Churchillian one
liner: A riddle wrapped in a mystery surrounded by an enigma.
(The writer is a retired Major General of the Indian Army and
founder member of the Defence Planning Staff, currently the revamped
Integrated Defence Staff)

