NATIONAL EMERGENCY

Sri Lanka: Police probing foreign-funding angle in communal clashes

About 10 people were detained on suspicion by the police

SRI LANKA-CLASHES/ Muslim men pray at a ground after a mosque burned down following a clash between two communities in Sri Lanka | Reuters

Sri Lankan police said on Friday they were investigating whether 10 suspected ringleaders of a wave of attacks on Muslims by Sinhalese Buddhists had outside funding or foreign help. 

The suspected leader of the group, Amith Jeewan Weerasinghe, and nine others were detained on Thursday on suspicion of involvement in attacks on mosques and Muslim-owned properties in the central Kandy district by nationalist crowds.

At least two people have been killed in the clashes, which began on Sunday.

“We are investigating who funded them, their future plans, and whether they have any local political leadership and whether there was any foreign involvement behind this,” police spokesman Ruwan Gunasekara told reporters in Colombo.

He said all 10 suspects had been remanded in custody for 14 days and brought to Colombo for questioning. He said three were from Kandy and the other seven from outside the district.

In the 24 hours to 6 am on Friday, six properties were reported to have been damaged while 65 people were arrested across Kandy, Gunasekara said.

Cabinet spokesman Dayasiri Jayasekara said police in some places had failed to carry out orders to curb the violence.

Sri Lanka’s Muslims make up about 9 per cent of its 21 million people and mostly live in the east and centre of the island. Buddhist Sinhalese account for about 70 per cent and ethnic Tamils, most of whom are Hindus, about 13 per cent.

Some Buddhist nationalists have protested against the presence in Sri Lanka of Muslim Rohingya asylum-seekers from mostly Buddhist Myanmar, where Buddhist nationalism has also been on the rise. 

However, in some areas, Sinhalese have helped Muslims to protect mosques, Muslim community leaders said.

Hundreds of Sinhalese including monks held a rally against the violence in Colombo on Friday, while many Muslim shopkeepers closed their doors in protest at the attacks.

Police reimposed a curfew in Kandy from 8 pm on Friday until 5 am on Saturday.

However, foreign visitors to the town, a prime tourist destination, were to be allowed out in the curfew if they had their passports with them.

Sri Lanka was for decades plagued by war between government forces and Tamil separatists. The government defeated the rebels in 2009. 

—Reuters

TAGS