Two years after bombings in Sri Lanka killed hundreds at
several churches and hotels on Easter, police on Saturday arrested a former
cabinet minister and his brother for alleged links to the bombings. Their
attorney claimed the arrests were politically motivated.
Rishad Bathiudeen, who leads an opposition party in the Sri
Lankan Parliament and formerly served in the cabinet, and his brother Reyaj
were arrested in Colombo April 24 for allegedly “aiding and abetting the
suicide bombers who committed the Easter Sunday carnage,” police spokesman
Ajith Rohana said, according to the Associated Press. The brothers were not yet
officially charged, but Rohana said there was direct evidence, circumstantial
evidence, and “scientific” evidence for their involvement in the attacks.
“They were arrested after the scrutiny of bank accounts,
check transactions and communication lines,” Rohana said, reported by the
Indian newspaper The Hindu.
On April 21, 2019, nine suicide bombers targeted two
Catholic churches, a Protestant church, four hotels, and a housing complex
almost simultaneously. The church bombings occured in the middle of Easter
Sunday services. The bombings killed more than 260 people and injured more than
500.
Two Sri Lankan groups who pledged allegiance to the Islamic
State group have been blamed for the attacks.
Foreign intelligence warned the government ahead of the
bombings, but a power struggle and a communication breakdown between the
then-president and prime minister reportedly led to a failure to coordinate a
security response.
Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith of Columbo has been an outspoken
advocate for further investigations into the bombings. Some critics of the
government’s investigation fear that corruption or negligence has prevented the
prosecutions of collaborators.
On Saturday, Rishad Bathiudeen posted to Facebook that
police were present outside his house since the early morning and were
“attempting to arrest me without a charge.”
“They have already arrested my brother. I have been in
Parliament, and have cooperated with all lawful authorities until now. This is
unjust,” he said.
His attorney, Rushdie Habeeb, said the arrests were
politically motivated. Habeeb said the arrests aimed to “punish the political
leadership of the Muslims, which had nothing to do with (April 21), for the
dastardly acts of some Muslim youths who were widely alleged as having been
used as pawns by foreign powers.”
Bathiudeen served as the country’s Minister of Industry and
Commerce, and now leads a minority Muslim party that is part of the main
opposition political party. His brother Riyaj was arrested in May 2020 for his
alleged contacts with suicide bombers, and was released on bail in October.
In September 2020 a police spokesman told journalists that
Riyaj Bathiudeen had met with one of the suicide bombers before one of the
attacks on a hotel, and that he had been accused of other acts of collaboration
with the bombers. Several other suspects were arrested but were eventually
released on the stated grounds of lack of evidence.
At that time, Cardinal Ranjith said security officials had
confirmed to him that there was sufficient evidence against many of the bombing
suspects who had been arrested. The cardinal, along with friends and family of
the victims, expressed concern that the release of the suspects signaled
corruption or a lack of a thorough investigation on the part of the Sri Lankan
Criminal Investigation Department.
Rishad Bathiudeen was previously arrested in October for
alleged misappropriation of state resources, and was released on bail in
November.
Catholic and other religious leaders commemorated the second
anniversary of the attacks on April 21, and prayed for an end to religious
extremism.
Cardinal Ranjith joined Hindu, Buddhist, and Muslim leaders
at the service, speaking at St. Anthony’s Shrine, the site of one of the major
bombings. The service included prayers and two minutes of silence in remembrance
of the dead.
Ranjith challenged the country’s Muslim communities to
reject extremism and help Catholics identify those responsible for the attack.
Muslim cleric Hassan Moulan said the Islamic faith does not justify crime, and
said that Muslims around the world condemned the attack. The Sri Lanka Muslim
community has not permitted the suicide bombers’ bodies to be buried in its
cemeteries, to distance them from the religion of Islam.
Sri Lanka’s President Gotabaya Rajapaksa won election in
2019 while promising to find the truth of the attacks. His government
previously accused a Muslim clergyman, who had been arrested after the attacks,
of being the organizer.
Catholic leaders rejected this claim and suspected foreign
involvement.
Ranjith has criticized a presidential commission that
investigated the attacks, saying it focused on political leaders’ failure to
prevent the attacks rather than on finding those directly responsible.
Sri Lanka is an island nation in the Indian Ocean, southwest
of the Bay of Bengal. Its population numbers more than 21 million people. More
than 70% of Sri Lankans are Buddhists, roughly 13% are Hindus, almost 10% are
Muslims, and fewer than 8% are Christians. There are 1.5 million Catholics in
the country, constituting the overwhelming majority of Sri Lanka’s Christians.
The country has been plagued with periodic violence since
its 26-year civil war concluded in 2009.
Roman Catholic Metropolitan Archdiocese of Colombo - SRI LANKA
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