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Sri Lanka’s Archbishop speaks out against activist’s arrest

Colombo, Sri Lanka
AP

Sri Lanka’s top Roman Catholic bishop on Tuesday spoke out against what he said was the wrongful arrest of an activist, saying that the government was targeting those who criticised its failure to properly investigate the 2019 Easter Sunday bombings. 

Archbishop of Colombo Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith likened to an “abduction” the arrest of activist Shehan Malaka Gamage, who has publicly questioned whether politicians used the 2019 attacks to force a change of government later that year.

Sri Lanka Colombo civil rights activists

Sri Lankan civil rights activists place their signatures in a petition demanding the government repeal country’s powerful Prevention of Terrorism Act in Colombo, Sri Lanka, on Tuesday, 15th February, 2022. Protestors and critics warn the law is being used against dissidents and minorities in the Buddhist-majority island nation. A statue of Colonel Henry Steel Olcott and the Fort Railway Station is seen behind. PICTURE: AP Photo/Eranga Jayawardena.

The bombings on 21st April, 2019, killed 260 people after hitting three churches and three hotels. Local Islamist militants who had pledged allegiance to the Islamic State group were blamed for the six near-simultaneous suicide attacks.

Activist Gamage was forcibly taken away from his home by plain clothed men, who were later identified as police, on Monday evening. Gamage shared the incident live on Facebook which shows him asking the men for the reason for taking him. 

A court in Colombo released him on bail Tuesday, hours after Cardinal Ranjith spoke from his residence.

“Had he not confirmed his arrest to the country through a live video, we wouldn’t know his whereabouts even now,” said Ranjith. “Fortunately he had the courage to show the country what was happening live.”

Ranjith called the activist’s arrest an “indecent and thuggish act” that resembled “an abduction”.



In the Facebook video, Gamage says that he initially tried to escape from the men who arrived in a white van not knowing their identity.

Sri Lankan security forces were accused of abducting dissidents and rebel suspects often in unmarked white vans during the country’s long civil war. Some victims were never seen again.

Ranjith has said repeatedly that the country’s top law enforcement officers had failed to arrest the true conspirators behind the bloody 2019 Easter bombings, despite filing charges against some of those directly involved. Instead they were “arresting those who are demanding justice for the attacks,” he said Tuesday.

The Archbishop suggested that the country’s Attorney General and police chief were acting “on the whims of those in the political world.”


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There was no immediate comment from the Attorney General’s office, but police spokesman Nihal Talduwa claimed that normal procedures were followed in arresting Gamage.

Talduwa said Gamage was arrested on charges of attempting to “excite disaffection toward the state”.

In repeated media conferences, Gamage alleged there was a possibility that some politicians and officials had deliberately failed to act on intelligence ahead of the 2019 attacks as they looked ahead to that year’s national elections.

Ranjith himself wrote a letter to President Gotabaya Rajapaksa last year raising questions over allegations that some members of state intelligence knew and had met with at least one of the attackers.

In 2019, friction between the country’s President and Prime Minister who belonged to different political parties were blamed for the government’s failure to act on near-specific foreign intelligence warnings. That led to the election of Rajapaksa later in the year on a platform of national security.

The government has denied involvement of any state agency in the attacks.

A presidential commission recommended that then-President Maithripala Sirisena be prosecuted for negligence, along with other officials and police personnel. However, no charges have been brought against Sirisena, now a government ally, or police officials.

 

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