Selasa, 23 April 2019

Sri Lanka Bombings Live Updates: Victims Interred in Mass Grave as Dozens Are Arrested - The New York Times

• The first funerals were held on Tuesday at the damaged church in western Sri Lanka, where as many as 100 parishioners were killed by a suicide bomber on Sunday. The coffins, many bearing the remains of children, were interred as the government declared a national day of mourning and raised the death toll from the weekend’s coordinated attacks to 321.

• The number of suspects arrested in connection with the attacks at churches and hotels increased to 40 from 24 on Tuesday as the government declared “emergency law.” The new law gives the police sweeping powers to detain and interrogate suspects without obtaining warrants.

• Intelligence agencies from across South Asia are sharing information about National Thowheeth Jama’ath, the radical Muslim group blamed for carrying out the attacks on churches and hotels. The group, previously known for small-scale acts of vandalism, is believed have the backing of “international terrorist organizations,” officials said.

• Sri Lanka’s highest-ranking Catholic official chastised the government for a serious lapse in security. The archbishop of Colombo, the country’s capital, blamed the authorities for failing take action against the Islamist group despite an intelligence memo issued at least 10 days before the bombings that warned the group was planning to attack churches.

Image
A funeral service at St. Sebastian’s Church in Negombo, Sri Lanka, on Tuesday.CreditCarl Court/Getty Images

The coffins came one by one, some heavy and others much lighter.

As bulldozers cleared more space in a vacant lot near a church in Negombo, Sri Lanka, barefoot men dripping with sweat scooped dirt with shovels as the sun beat down.

One family stood in the shade. They were here for the burial of an 11-year-old boy.

“I don’t even know what to say,” said Lasanthi Anusha, a woman who came for the burial of her son’s classmate. “There were even smaller ones.”

Tuesday was the beginning of the first mass burials of the victims of Sunday’s suicide attacks in Sri Lanka, which killed more than 300 people, including many children. Soldiers and even an armored personnel carrier lined the roads as the burials unfolded under widespread grief and intense security.

Of the half-dozen sites simultaneously attacked on Sunday, the St. Sebastian Church in Negombo was the hardest hit. A suicide bomber, who has been linked to a homegrown Sri Lankan Islamist group, killed as many as 100 people here.

On Tuesday, priests wearing crisp white robes trimmed with black sashes held funerals in a large tent just outside the church. The funerals were scheduled to go all day. The neighborhood around the church had been turned into an enormous, fortified mourning ground, with hundreds of soldiers deployed in every direction and little white flags fluttering in the wind.

Image
Mourners at the mass funeral at St. Sebastian’s Church.CreditCarl Court/Getty Images

A full day of national mourning was declared across the country on Tuesday, as flags were lowered and a moment of silence was observed.

At 8:30 a.m., the time the first of six attacks were carried out on Sunday, Sri Lankans of differing faiths and ethnic groups bowed their heads and remained silent for three minutes.

Tuesday's moment of silence coincided with a report from a police spokesman that the death toll had risen to 310, up from 290 on Monday.

As part of the mourning period, liquor stores were ordered closed. Radio and television stations have played somber music throughout the day.

The front pages of local newspapers were similarly solemn on Tuesday. One, The Daily Mirror, printed a stark all black cover that read, “In remembrance of all those who lost their lives on 21.04.2019.”

Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith, the archbishop of Colombo, condemned the government on Tuesday for failing to act on an intelligence report that warned of a potential attack on churches.

“News media reported that there was information pertaining to a possible attack,” Cardinal Ranjith said at a news conference. “If that’s the case, couldn’t we have prevented the situation? Why wasn’t there any action?”

A security services briefing written at least 10 days before the bombings warned that National Thowheeth Jama’ath was planning to attack churches.

Image
Surveying the damage at St. Sebastian’s Church on Monday.CreditAdam Dean for The New York Times

Whoever designed the suicide vests used in the blasts showed considerable competence, a fact that is certain to worry law enforcement agencies, said Scott Stewart, vice president for tactical analysis at Stratfor, a geopolitical consulting firm based in Austin, Tex.

When small, homegrown extremist groups use explosives, they often start with a series of failures. Some bombs fail to detonate completely, and others explode early, late, or not at all.

But in the Sri Lanka attack, it appears that all seven suicide vests detonated and did heavy damage, Mr. Stewart said, indicating skill at making bombs and manually activated detonators, and suggesting access to a large supply of military-grade high explosives.

“You don’t do that by accident, so they must have a fairly decent logistics network and funding,” he added.

But Joshua A. Geltzer, a former senior director for counterterrorism at the National Security Council, said he would not be surprised if a small group had been able to stage the attack without direct help.

“There is so, so much instruction and guidance available on the open internet these days, not to mention whatever is circulating on encrypted chat groups, widely available in terrorist circles if not totally public,” he said.

Unexploded bombs, apparently not designed for suicide attacks, were found in other public places in Sri Lanka. That suggests that the bomb maker (or makers) was less expert at detonation using timers or remote control, Mr. Stewart said.

Image
President Maithripala Sirisena in December. Mr. Sirisena’s government has given additional powers to the police and security forces to detain and interrogate people.CreditAdam Dean for The New York Times

Sri Lankan officials took a series of extraordinary steps in an effort to keep control of their shaken country, aiming to prevent further extremist attacks and retaliatory violence.

Mr. Sirisena, the president, said the government had given additional powers to the police and security forces to detain and interrogate people, and for the second day in a row, a curfew was imposed, from 8 p.m. until 4 a.m.

The government temporarily blocked several networks, including Facebook and Instagram. Users also reported being unable to access the messaging services WhatsApp and Viber.

Though Sunday’s attacks have no known link to social media, Sri Lanka has a troubled history with violence incited on the platforms. The ban was an extraordinary step that reflected growing global concerns about social media.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/23/world/asia/sri-lanka-bombing.html

2019-04-23 07:59:12Z
52780273201173

Sri Lanka Bombings Live Updates: Victims Interred in Mass Grave as Dozens Are Arrested - The New York Times

• The first funerals were held on Tuesday at the damaged church in western Sri Lanka, where as many as 100 parishioners had been killed by a suicide bomber on Sunday. The coffins, many bearing the remains of children, were interred as the government declared a national day of mourning and raised the death toll from the weekend’s coordinated attacks to 310.

• The number of suspects arrested in connection with the attacks at churches and hotels increased to 40 from 24 on Tuesday as the government declared “emergency law.” The new law gives the police sweeping powers to detain and interrogate suspects without obtaining warrants.

• Intelligence agencies from across South Asia are sharing information about National Thowheeth Jama’ath, the radical Muslim group blamed for carrying out the attacks on churches and hotels. The group, previously known for small-scale acts of vandalism, is believed have backing by “international terrorist organizations,” officials said.

• As intelligence and security officials searched for clues about the perpetrators, politicians pointed fingers after it was revealed that the country’s security forces were warned at least 10 days before the bombings that the militant group was planning attacks against churches, but apparently took no action.

Image
A funeral service at St. Sebastian’s Church in Negombo, Sri Lanka, on Tuesday.CreditCarl Court/Getty Images

The coffins came one by one, some heavy and others much lighter.

As bulldozers cleared more space in a vacant lot near a church in Negombo, Sri Lanka, barefoot men dripping with sweat scooped dirt with shovels as the sun beat down.

One family stood in the shade. They were here for the burial of an 11-year-old boy.

“I don’t even know what to say,” said Lasanthi Anusha, a woman who came for the burial of her son’s classmate. “There were even smaller ones.”

Tuesday was the beginning of the first mass burials of the victims of Sunday’s suicide attacks in Sri Lanka, which killed more than 300 people, including many children. Soldiers and even an armored personnel carrier lined the roads as the burials unfolded under widespread grief and intense security.

Of the half-dozen sites simultaneously attacked on Sunday, the St. Sebastian Church in Negombo was the hardest hit. A suicide bomber, who has been linked to a homegrown Sri Lankan Islamist group, killed as many as 100 people here.

On Tuesday, priests wearing crisp white robes trimmed with black sashes held funerals in a large tent just outside the church. The funerals were scheduled to go all day. The neighborhood around the church had been turned into an enormous, fortified mourning ground, with hundreds of soldiers deployed in every direction and little white flags fluttering in the wind.

Image
Mourners at the mass funeral at St. Sebastian’s Church.CreditCarl Court/Getty Images

A full day of national mourning was declared across the country on Tuesday, as flags were lowered and a moment of silence was observed.

At 8:30 a.m., the time the first of six attacks were carried out on Sunday, Sri Lankans of differing faiths and ethnic groups bowed their heads and remained silent for three minutes.

Tuesday's moment of silence coincided with a report from a police spokesman that the death toll had risen to 310, up from 290 on Monday.

As part of the mourning period, liquor stores were ordered closed. Radio and television stations have played somber music throughout the day.

The front pages of local newspapers were similarly solemn on Tuesday. One, The Daily Mirror, printed a stark all black cover that read, “In remembrance of all those who lost their lives on 21.04.2019.”

One of the suicide bombers was arrested just a few months ago, Sri Lankan officials disclosed on Monday, on suspicion of having vandalized a statue of Buddha. That is an inflammatory act in a Buddhist-majority nation where strident religiosity, on all sides, seems to be increasing.

The disclosure of the arrest came as Sri Lankan officials squared off over the attacks, and whether more could have been done to try to prevent them. In a government that is no stranger to crisis, the bitter recriminations suggested that a new one may be in the offing.

New details emerged about a confidential security memo on the group believed to be behind the attacks, which was issued 10 days before it struck. The memo appeared to lay it all out: names, addresses, phone numbers, even the times in the middle of the night that one suspect would visit his wife.

Image
Surveying the damage at St. Sebastian’s Church on Monday.CreditAdam Dean for The New York Times

Whoever designed the suicide vests used in the blasts showed considerable competence, a fact that is certain to worry law enforcement agencies, said Scott Stewart, vice president for tactical analysis at Stratfor, a geopolitical consulting firm based in Austin, Tex.

When small, homegrown extremist groups use explosives, they often start with a series of failures. Some bombs fail to detonate completely, and others explode early, late, or not at all.

But in the Sri Lanka attack, it appears that all seven suicide vests detonated and did heavy damage, Mr. Stewart said, indicating skill at making bombs and manually activated detonators, and suggesting access to a large supply of military-grade high explosives.

“You don’t do that by accident, so they must have a fairly decent logistics network and funding,” he added.

But Joshua A. Geltzer, a former senior director for counterterrorism at the National Security Council, said he would not be surprised if a small group had been able to stage the attack without direct help.

“There is so, so much instruction and guidance available on the open internet these days, not to mention whatever is circulating on encrypted chat groups, widely available in terrorist circles if not totally public,” he said.

Unexploded bombs, apparently not designed for suicide attacks, were found in other public places in Sri Lanka. That suggests that the bomb maker (or makers) was less expert at detonation using timers or remote control, Mr. Stewart said.

Image
President Maithripala Sirisena in December. Mr. Sirisena’s government has given additional powers to the police and security forces to detain and interrogate people.CreditAdam Dean for The New York Times

Sri Lankan officials took a series of extraordinary steps in an effort to keep control of their shaken country, aiming to prevent further extremist attacks and retaliatory violence.

Mr. Sirisena, the president, said the government had given additional powers to the police and security forces to detain and interrogate people, and for the second day in a row, a curfew was imposed, from 8 p.m. until 4 a.m.

The government temporarily blocked several networks, including Facebook and Instagram. Users also reported being unable to access the messaging services WhatsApp and Viber.

Though Sunday’s attacks have no known link to social media, Sri Lanka has a troubled history with violence incited on the platforms. The ban was an extraordinary step that reflected growing global concerns about social media.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/23/world/asia/sri-lanka-bombing.html

2019-04-23 07:47:50Z
52780273201173

Sri Lanka Bombings Live Updates: Victims Interred in Mass Grave as Dozens Are Arrested - The New York Times

• The first funerals were held on Tuesday at the damaged church in western Sri Lanka, where as many as 100 parishioners had been killed by a suicide bomber on Sunday. The coffins, many bearing the remains of children, were interred as the government declared a national day of mourning and raised the death toll from the weekend’s coordinated attacks to 310.

• The number of suspects arrested in connection with the attacks at churches and hotels increased to 40 from 24 on Tuesday as the government declared “emergency law.” The new law gives the police sweeping powers to detain and interrogate suspects without obtaining warrants.

• Intelligence agencies from across South Asia are sharing information about National Thowheeth Jama’ath, the radical Muslim group blamed for carrying out the attacks on churches and hotels. The group, previously known for small-scale acts of vandalism, is believed have backing by “international terrorist organizations,” officials said.

• As intelligence and security officials searched for clues about the perpetrators, politicians pointed fingers after it was revealed that the country’s security forces were warned at least 10 days before the bombings that the militant group was planning attacks against churches, but apparently took no action.

Image
A funeral service near St. Sebastian’s Church in Negombo, Sri Lanka, on Tuesday.CreditAthit Perawongmetha/Reuters

The coffins came one by one, some heavy and others much lighter.

As bulldozers cleared more space in a vacant lot near a church in Negombo, Sri Lanka, barefoot men dripping with sweat scooped dirt with shovels as the sun beat down.

One family stood in the shade. They were here for the burial of an 11-year-old boy.

“I don’t even know what to say,” said Lasanthi Anusha, a woman who came for the burial of her son’s classmate. “There were even smaller ones.”

Tuesday was the beginning of the first mass burials of the victims of Sunday’s suicide attacks in Sri Lanka, which killed more than 300 people, including many children. Soldiers and even an armored personnel carrier lined the roads as the burials unfolded under widespread grief and intense security.

Of the half-dozen sites simultaneously attacked on Sunday, the St. Sebastian Church in Negombo was the hardest hit. A suicide bomber, who has been linked to a homegrown Sri Lankan Islamist group, killed as many as 100 people here.

On Tuesday, priests wearing crisp white robes trimmed with black sashes held funerals in a large tent just outside the church. The funerals were scheduled to go all day. The neighborhood around the church had been turned into an enormous, fortified mourning ground, with hundreds of soldiers deployed in every direction and little white flags fluttering in the wind.

A full day of national mourning was declared across the country on Tuesday, as flags were lowered and a moment of silence was observed.

At 8:30 a.m., the time the first of six attacks were carried out on Sunday, Sri Lankans of differing faiths and ethnic groups bowed their heads and remained silent for three minutes.

Tuesday's moment of silence coincided with a report from a police spokesman that the death toll had risen to 310, up from 290 on Monday.

As part of the mourning period, liquor stores were ordered closed. Radio and television stations have played somber music throughout the day.

The front pages of local newspapers were similarly solemn on Tuesday. One, The Daily Mirror, printed a stark all black cover that read, “In remembrance of all those who lost their lives on 21.04.2019.”

One of the suicide bombers was arrested just a few months ago, Sri Lankan officials disclosed on Monday, on suspicion of having vandalized a statue of Buddha. That is an inflammatory act in a Buddhist-majority nation where strident religiosity, on all sides, seems to be increasing.

The disclosure of the arrest came as Sri Lankan officials squared off over the attacks, and whether more could have been done to try to prevent them. In a government that is no stranger to crisis, the bitter recriminations suggested that a new one may be in the offing.

New details emerged about a confidential security memo on the group believed to be behind the attacks, which was issued 10 days before it struck. The memo appeared to lay it all out: names, addresses, phone numbers, even the times in the middle of the night that one suspect would visit his wife.

Image
Surveying the damage at St. Sebastian’s Church on Monday.CreditAdam Dean for The New York Times

Whoever designed the suicide vests used in the blasts showed considerable competence, a fact that is certain to worry law enforcement agencies, said Scott Stewart, vice president for tactical analysis at Stratfor, a geopolitical consulting firm based in Austin, Tex.

When small, homegrown extremist groups use explosives, they often start with a series of failures. Some bombs fail to detonate completely, and others explode early, late, or not at all.

But in the Sri Lanka attack, it appears that all seven suicide vests detonated and did heavy damage, Mr. Stewart said, indicating skill at making bombs and manually activated detonators, and suggesting access to a large supply of military-grade high explosives.

“You don’t do that by accident, so they must have a fairly decent logistics network and funding,” he added.

But Joshua A. Geltzer, a former senior director for counterterrorism at the National Security Council, said he would not be surprised if a small group had been able to stage the attack without direct help.

“There is so, so much instruction and guidance available on the open internet these days, not to mention whatever is circulating on encrypted chat groups, widely available in terrorist circles if not totally public,” he said.

Unexploded bombs, apparently not designed for suicide attacks, were found in other public places in Sri Lanka. That suggests that the bomb maker (or makers) was less expert at detonation using timers or remote control, Mr. Stewart said.

Image
President Maithripala Sirisena in December. Mr. Sirisena’s government has given additional powers to the police and security forces to detain and interrogate people.CreditAdam Dean for The New York Times

Sri Lankan officials took a series of extraordinary steps in an effort to keep control of their shaken country, aiming to prevent further extremist attacks and retaliatory violence.

Mr. Sirisena, the president, said the government had given additional powers to the police and security forces to detain and interrogate people, and for the second day in a row, a curfew was imposed, from 8 p.m. until 4 a.m.

The government temporarily blocked several networks, including Facebook and Instagram. Users also reported being unable to access the messaging services WhatsApp and Viber.

Though Sunday’s attacks have no known link to social media, Sri Lanka has a troubled history with violence incited on the platforms. The ban was an extraordinary step that reflected growing global concerns about social media.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/23/world/asia/sri-lanka-bombing.html

2019-04-23 07:41:15Z
52780273201173

Myanmar’s Highest Court Upholds Conviction of Reuters Journalists - The New York Times

JAKARTA, Indonesia — Myanmar’s highest court ruled against two Reuters reporters on Tuesday, upholding their conviction for violating a state secrets law after they uncovered a military massacre.

The two reporters, U Wa Lone, 33, and U Kyaw Soe Oo, 29, were sentenced in September to seven years in prison under the colonial-era Official Secrets Act for receiving documents from a police officer. They have been imprisoned for 16 months, drawing international condemnation by human rights groups and media organizations.

Their defense lawyers argued that the evidence in the case was planted by the police and that the rolled-up papers they were handed contained information that was already public. The reporters testified at trial that they were arrested so quickly that they never had a chance to look at the documents.

“Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo did not commit any crime, nor was there any proof that they did,” Gail Gove, Reuters’ chief counsel, said after the Supreme Court ruling was announced. “Instead, they were victims of a police setup to silence their truthful reporting. We will continue to do all we can to free them as soon as possible.”

Mr. Wa Lone and Mr. Kyaw Soe Oo have been widely praised for their work in uncovering the massacre of 10 Rohingya Muslim villagers who were fatally shot by soldiers and villagers in September 2017 in Inn Din village in Rakhine State.

They were among the Reuters journalists awarded the Pulitzer Prize for international reporting earlier this month. Arrested in December 2017, they have been in prison ever since.

In Myanmar, the military and civilian leaders share power under a constitution imposed by the military.

Many people in Myanmar and around the world had hoped that Daw Aung San Suu Kyi, a Nobel Peace laureate who became the country’s de facto civilian leader, would promote democracy and free speech.

But instead, she has often allied herself with the military, which carried out what the United Nations has called a genocide of the Rohingya people, killing thousands, burning villages, raping women and girls and forcing more than 750,000 to flee across the border into Bangladesh, where they now live in refugee camps.

Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi has had numerous opportunities to free the two journalists but has refused all entreaties.

Her attorney general, Htun Htun Oo, oversaw the prosecution of the case, which human rights advocates argued should have been dropped.

Earlier this month, the country’s president, Win Myint, pardoned almost 10,000 prisoners, but Mr. Wa Lone and Mr. Kyaw Soe Oo were not among them.

“Wa Lone and Kyaw Soe Oo should never have been arrested, much less prosecuted, for doing their jobs as investigative journalists,” said Phil Robertson, deputy Asia director of Human Rights Watch. “That they are still in prison shows just how wrong Myanmar’s democracy under Aung San Suu Kyi is going.”

Chit Su Win, the wife of Mr. Kyaw Soe Oo, said she had hoped that the Supreme Court would at least reduce the prison sentences of her husband and Mr. Wa Lone.

“I’m very disappointed with the decision,” she said.

Their lawyer, Khin Maung Zaw, said they would seek a pardon from Mr. Win Myint. But since he was handpicked by Ms. Aung San Suu Kyi and reports to her, any decision to free the reporters would almost certainly rest with her.

“Myanmar has a very weak judicial system for freedom of press and human rights,” Mr. Khin Maung Zaw said.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/23/world/asia/reuters-journalists-myanmar-supreme-court.html

2019-04-23 05:55:26Z
52780275166202

Senin, 22 April 2019

What We Know and Don’t Know About the Sri Lanka Attacks - The New York Times

Attacks by suicide bombers on Sunday in Sri Lanka killed more than 290 people and wounded about 500 more.

The victims came from at least eight countries, and included worshipers at Easter Sunday services at the three churches that were among the targets of the coordinated bombings.

Sri Lanka’s president on Monday declared a conditional state of emergency that gave the security services sweeping powers to arrest and interrogate people, and to conduct search-and-seizures. A dusk-to-dawn curfew was in effect on Monday night in Colombo, the capital, and major social media and messaging services remained blocked by the government.

• The authorities in Sri Lanka said a little-known radical Islamist group, the National Thowheeth Jama’ath, carried out the attacks, with help from international militants. No organization has yet claimed responsibility.

• The leader of Thowheeth Jama’ath, Mohammed Zaharan, is a known extremist who has spent time in both India and Sri Lanka, and who in recent years has preached hateful messages online.

• The Sri Lankan government acknowledged that more than 10 days before the attacks, a foreign intelligence agency gave the country’s security officials a detailed warning of a possible threat to churches by Thowheeth Jama’ath.

• That the country’s security agencies did not aggressively act on the warnings is being called a “colossal failure on the part of the intelligence services” and has created a crisis for the government.

• Within hours of the bombings, Sri Lankan security services arrested at least 24 suspects, suggesting the government knew where key members of Thowheeth Jama’ath could be found. The group was under surveillance, and the authorities had learned as far back as January that radical Islamists possibly tied to the group had stockpiled weapons and detonators.

• A forensic analysis of body parts found that most of the attacks had been carried out by lone bombers, but that two men had attacked the Shangri-La Hotel in Colombo.

• One of the suicide bombers was arrested a few months ago on suspicion of having vandalized a statue of Buddha, a highly provocative act in Sri Lanka, a Buddhist-majority island nation in the Indian Ocean.

• In Washington, intelligence and counterterrorism analysts were scrutinizing possible ties between the Islamic State and the attackers, but as of Monday afternoon had not reached any definitive conclusions.

• The attacks took place at three churches and three hotels on Sunday morning in three separate cities across the island. Two more explosions happened in the afternoon in and around Colombo, one at a small guesthouse and the other at what was the suspects’ apparent safe house. Three officers searching for the attackers were killed in that blast.

• The deadliest of the explosions appeared to be at St. Sebastian’s Church in Negombo, about 20 miles north of Colombo, where at least 104 were killed.

• At least 28 people were killed at the Zion Church in Batticaloa, on the other side of the island on its eastern coast. St. Anthony’s Shrine, a Roman Catholic church in Colombo, was also attacked with an unknown number of dead. Witnesses described “a river of blood” there.

• In addition to the Shangri-La, the Cinnamon Grand and the Kingsbury hotels, also in Colombo, were attacked.

• At least 36 of the dead were foreigners, several of them American, the authorities said. Others were British, Chinese, Dutch, Indian, Portuguese, Japanese and Turkish citizens, according to officials and news reports.

[Follow our live updates on the bombings.]

• How a small, obscure group that was previously best known for desecrating Buddhist statues managed to pull off sophisticated, coordinated attacks.

• What international terrorist network or networks, if any, helped with the attacks.

• The names of the suicide bombers and the 24 people being held in connection with the attacks.

• Why Catholics appear to have been singled out in the bombings in a Buddhist-majority nation with a sizable Hindu minority.

• Why the authorities failed to take substantial steps to try to prevent an attack after receiving reports of an imminent threat.

• What the effect of the failure to stop the attacks will have on Sri Lanka’s government, where the president and prime minister were already engaged in a bitter feud.

• How many of the approximately 500 wounded people were in critical condition, and what the final death toll might be.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.nytimes.com/2019/04/22/world/asia/sri-lanka-attacks-updates.html

2019-04-23 00:00:06Z
52780273201173

Could the Sri Lanka bombings have been stopped? - CNN

Some elements of the government had known for weeks about warnings of a potential attack on churches and tourist destinations.
Intelligence services in India and the US told Sri Lanka of the threat in early April, officials said. One memo compiled by Sri Lankan security officials was so specific that it even gave a list of suspects. In the runup to the holiest day in the Christian calendar, the warnings seemed to increase in frequency and urgency.
But none made any difference.
When suicide bombers walked into three churches around Sri Lanka, and three upscale hotels in Colombo, none faced enhanced security. As worshipers closed their eyes in prayer, as hotel guests lined up for breakfast, the attackers detonated their devices -- and the effects were devastating.
It was unclear on Monday why the red flags went unheeded. But Sri Lanka has been wracked by political divisions since a constitutional crisis last year, when President Maithripala Sirisena attempted to replace the incumbent Prime Minister, Ranil Wickremesinghe, with a favored candidate. Wickremesinghe was reinstated in December after the intervention of the Supreme Court, but the government remains deeply divided.
Now, there are fears that the political feuding could have provided a window for a catastrophic security lapse that could reverberate across the region.

Series of warnings

The origins of what appears to be a spectacular security failure go back more than two weeks. On April 4, according to government spokesman Rajitha Senaratne, foreign international intelligence agencies told Sri Lankan officials of a potential plot to launch suicide attacks against Christian churches and tourist spots.
Five days later, on April 9, the country's Defense Ministry informed the Inspector General of Police of this alleged plot, and named a group believed to be behind the plan, the Nations Thawahid Jaman (NTJ). Unusually, the memo also included a list of suspects.
On April 11, another memo, signed by Priyalal Dissanayake, the Deputy Inspector General of Police, was circulated widely to a range of security services and some government ministries, according to Senaratne and a police source. That memo, a copy of which has been seen by CNN, laid out the threat and again contained a list of suspects.
Security personnel inspect the interior of St Sebastian's Church in Negombo on April 22, 2019, a day after the church was hit in series of bomb blasts.
Foreign security services repeated their warnings in the days and hours before the attack, Senaratne said. One warning came ten minutes before the blasts, he claimed -- although it was not clear whether he was speaking with precision.
Harsha de Silva, an economy minister, told CNN's Christiane Amanpour that international warnings that "something terrible was to happen" came from the US and neighboring India.

Government infighting

All of this came against the backdrop of the divisions within government that lingered from constitutional crisis of 2018. In his interview with CNN, De Silva said the Prime Minister was "kept in the dark" about the warnings.
Senaratne, who is also a health minister, said the Prime Minister had been removed from the national security council in December, and therefore did not receive confidential security briefings.
Even after the attack, members of the national security council refused to attend a meeting called by the Prime Minister, Senaratne claimed. "I think this is the only country in the world where the security council does not like to come when summoned by the Prime Minister of the country," he said.
Referring to the warnings about the involvement of the NTJ in a potential attack, Senaratne said he did not believe a local group could have acted alone. "There must be a wider international network behind it," he told reporters.
In a statement, reported by Reuters, President Sirisena said the Sri Lankan government would seek would seek foreign assistance as it investigated potential international links to the attack. His office would not comment on the apparent failure to heed warnings, Reuters said.
De Silva, an ally of the Prime Minister, argued the Sunday's terrible loss of life did not amount to a failure of intelligence, but a failure to mount an appropriate response to the intelligence.
Sri Lankan priests look at the debris of a car after it explodes when police tried to defuse a bomb near St. Anthony's Shrine a day after the Easter Sunday  attacks.

Focus on Islamist group

The group named in the memos as planning an attack, Nations Thawahid Jaman, has hitherto acted only in the margins, blamed for little more than defacing Buddhist statues.
According to Saroj Kumar Rath, a terrorism and security expert at the University of Delhi, NTJ has its origins in the South Indian state of Tamil Nadu in the early 2000s.
Manoj Joshi, a fellow at Indian think tank Observer Research Foundation, said that NTJ had carried out protests at places like liquor stores in the past, but he wasn't aware that it had initiated any previous terror attacks.
There are numerous small groups like the NTJ around India and South Asia, Joshi said. "The problem was that this group did not have a history of any kind (of violence) in the past. They (the authorities) may have been blindsided by the lack of focus on this group," Joshi said, noting that that while Sri Lanka was no stranger to terrorist attacks, violence there has historically existed under a very different context.
Mainstream Muslim groups have said they tried to warn the Sri Lankan authorities about the potential danger posed by NTJ. But its relative obscurity has raised questions about whether it would have had the capacity to carry out such a sophisticated and coordinated attack alone.
Dhruva Jaishankar, a fellow in foreign policy studies at Brookings India, told CNN that while it was premature to speculate on which organizations might have been involved, the role of "a larger organization cannot be dismissed."
"It's a bit of a stretch for an organization like that to conduct sophisticated simultaneous explosions," he said of NTJ.
Jaishankar said there was a known presence of ISIS-linked groups in neighboring India, the Maldives, and Bangladesh -- as well as Pakistan and the Philippines -- but that there was little evidence of ISIS activity in Sri Lanka.
What seems clear, Jaishankar said, is that the assault had a religious motivation and was also designed to target foreigners. "These are people who wanted to hurt Sri Lanka's reputation," he said.
The coordination and planning of Sunday's attacks -- involving multiple high profile targets, suicide bombers and powerful bombs -- appears to have been intense, and must have been long in the works.
Sri Lankan authorities have already admitted to missing multiple warning signs. Now, a nation still reeling in horror from Sunday's bloodshed is waiting to see just how widespread the failure was, and how much of a role its disfunctional politics played in it.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.cnn.com/2019/04/22/asia/sri-lanka-bombings-warnings-unheeded-intl/index.html

2019-04-22 20:30:00Z
52780273201173

Iran's hard-liners can ill afford new US sanctions, they will retaliate - Washington Examiner

Under escalating pressure from U.S. sanctions, Iran's leaders face an existential crisis. As a result, they are increasingly likely to strike out against the U.S. in response.

The latest U.S. action against Iran came on Monday when Secretary of State Mike Pompeo ended waivers that allow foreign nations to purchase Iranian oil without U.S. sanction reprisals. Pompeo, however, also pledged that Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates will increase their oil production to maintain price stability. It's the correct course of action.

Yes, the U.S. must ensure this doesn't harm America's growing partnership with India, a top importer of Iranian oil, and yes, the U.S. should more tightly define its demands of Iran. Trump should also authorize similar action against Nicolás Maduro's Venezuelan regime.

Still, ending waivers will reduce the power of Iran's hard-line faction. Their declining revenue means less ability to spread sectarian brutality. And for the fanatics, America's pressure comes at an inopportune time. Iran's economy is already suffering. Economic growth is lethargic, inflation reached 47% in March 2019, food inflation is even higher, and youth unemployment soars. With Iran highly dependent on oil exports for its foreign capital generation, U.S. oil export pressure will cut deep.

The hard-liners need oil sales to prop up the security agencies and militias that sustain its power. Crude oil prices are now at $65 a barrel and have been rising since January, when they went as low as $45 per barrel. Unable to sell oil at today's higher price, Iran is losing out at the margin on hundreds of millions of otherwise easy dollars.

Yet the U.S. shouldn't be arrogant here, for it is precisely the coming economic damage and lost opportunity that will motivate the hard-liners to escalate.

While that escalation has been coming for months now, the portent of a near-total end to oil export revenue will catalyze the hard-liners' fear and anger. They live and die for the Islamic revolution and will protect that interest at high cost. The most likely Iranian action is closing the Strait of Hormuz, through which vast oil supplies flow. Iran might hope that this action would induce international pressure on the U.S. to reduce its pressure on Iran.

Pompeo knows this, which explains why he warned on Monday that any violence by Iranian officers, agents, or militias will meet forceful retaliation. Regardless, choppy waters lie ahead.

Let's block ads! (Why?)


https://www.washingtonexaminer.com/opinion/irans-hard-liners-can-ill-afford-new-us-sanctions-they-will-retaliate

2019-04-22 15:47:00Z
52780274127606