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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, May 7, 2019
Sri Lanka: How To Prevent Instability
There are indications that there might be more attacks by IS in Sri Lanka
- 2019-05-06

by Col R Hariharan -2019-05-06
Nine members of a small local radical Islamic outfit - National Towheed
Jamaath (NTJ) led by Zahran Hashim - carried out the attacks targeted
three churches and three luxury hotels frequented by foreign tourists.
Later, the IS released a video of seven men including Hashim, thought to
be the bombers, pledging allegiance to the IS. Only Hashim showed his
face.
Sri Lanka government was in total disarray after the Deputy Inspector
General(DIG) Priyalal Dassanayaka confirmed that he had sent a letter
ten days ago (April 11) information of the NTJ’s planned attacks
received from foreign intelligence agency to the Ministry of Defence and
the police. The letter based upon information received from a foreign
agency warned that Zahran Hashim and a few others were planning suicide
attacks or knife attacks targeting churches and the Indian high
commission.
President Maithripala Sirisena, who was on a private visit to Singapore
when the blasts took place, returned on hearing the news. However, he
denied knowledge of the intelligence reports. He accused the defence
secretary Hemasiri Fernando and IGP Jayasundara of failing to brief him
about the threat.
But President Sirisena’s credibility has come under a cloud on the
issue. Colombo web Daily FT quoted “multiple sources with close
knowledge of the inner workings” of the Defence establishment saying
that the State Intelligence Service (SIS) Director Senior DIG of Police
Nilantha Jayawardana had provided detailed reports on the planned attack
to the President on at least three occasions, including one on April
11.
The Ministry of Defence had relayed the latest report from India on the
evening of April 20 that the attack was imminent. When the last minute
reports came the SIS had transmitted the warning to the IGP, who “failed
to alert churches about the threats” according to the report.
Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe tried to evade his responsibility by
saying that he was unaware of the warnings as he was out of the loop.
He told the BBC “if we had any inkling, and we had not taken action, I
would have handed in my resignation.” However, he did not explain what
effort he made when the President excluded him from attending the
National Security Council (NSC) meetings held to discuss national
security.
President Sirisena in a damage control mode sacked the defence secretary
Fernando and appointed General SHS Kottegoda in his place. The
President chaired a meeting of the NSC and declared a state of emergency
after two days. The government banned the NTJ and Jamathe-i-Milathu
Ibrahim Seilani (JMI) – a little known organization - under the
emergency regulations. Many Muslim leaders have said they had earlier
warned the government about the NTJ’s nefarious activities many times to
the authorities including the police.
In the follow up operations security forces were able to round up over
150 suspected NTJ members and sympathisers. In Ampara district, NTJ
leader Hashim’s two brothers and their 12 member family had moved in a
village near Kalmunai in eastern province. Local Muslim villagers
confronted them when they saw a weapon and one of the terrorists
exploded a device killing all the family members, barring Hashim’s wife
and daughter who were injured. Police have also recovered a cache of
weapons and explosives.
For better coordination, army, navy, air force and police within the
Western province and Puttalam district have been placed under command of
the Overall Operational Command, Colombo, for operational purposes.
It is a tribute to Sri Lanka people that all religious leaders,
particularly Cardinal Malcom Ranjith, have counseled peace and prevented
a religious backlash after the attacks. The All Ceylon Jamiyyathul
Ulama (ACJU), the apex religious body of Islamic theologians providing
community leadership, has appealed to the members of the community to
maintain peace and cooperate with security forces in their work. It also
appealed to women members not to cover their face by wearing a niqab to
facilitate easy identification. Officially face covering by women has
been banned.
However, in the coming months former president Mahinda Rajapaksa and his
brother and presidential aspirant Gotabaya Rajapaksa are likely to take
advantage of the serious security failure of President Sirisena and PM
Wickremesinghe in handling the IS threat. With the presidential poll
scheduled for the year end, political turbulence is likely to increase
between the President and the PM.
There is a growing demand for taking action against Muslim politicians
who had alleged connections with the NTJ. Tamil National Alliance (TNA)
parliamentarian MA Sumanthiran has demanded that Eastern Province
Governor MLAM Hizbulla must be investigated for connections with NTJ.
Similarly, SLFP General Secretary Dayasiri Jayasekara has alleged that
Muslim Religious Affairs Minister M.H.A. Haleem had issued permits to
set up 40 National Tawheed Jamaat (NTJ) dens in the Kandy District and
400 others countrywide since 2015. How the government proposes to handle
the sensitive issue of minority Muslims in the coming months is the
moot point.
There are indications that there might be more attacks by IS in Sri
Lanka. The State Intelligence Service has received information on an
attack targeting the Buddhist temples by the NTJ using female bombers.
According to a Reuters report, the US Ambassador to Sri Lanka Alaina
Teplitz said the US believed members of the militant group blamed for
Easter Sunday attacks may be at large and planning more assaults. “We do
believe that the terrorist threat is ongoing and there may be active
plotters. Active members of the attack group that carried out the terror
attacks on Easter Sunday may still be at large,” Ambassador Teplitz
said.“We certainly have reason to believe that the active attack group
has not been fully rendered inactive. We do believe that there is active
planning underway,” she said.
Unless the government cleans up its security coordination preparedness
fast, Sri Lanka can be plunged into a period of instability.
Col R Hariharan, a retired MI officer, served as the head of
Intelligence of the Indian Peace Keeping Force in Sri Lanka from 1987 to
90. He is associated with the Chennai Centre for China Studies, South
Asia Analysis Group and the International Law and Strategic Analysis
Institute, Chennai. E-mail: haridirect@gmail.com Blog: http://col.hariharan.info
