Sri Lanka arrests ex-spy chief over 2019 Easter bombings
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Sri Lankan security personnel walk past dead bodies covered with blankets amid blast debris at St Anthony's Shrine, following an explosion in the church in Kochchikade, Colombo.
PHOTO: AFP
COLOMBO – Sri Lanka’s criminal investigators arrested the country’s former intelligence chief on Feb 25 in connection with the 2019 Easter Sunday bombings
Police said retired major-general Suresh Sallay was taken into custody at dawn in a suburb of the capital, Colombo, in the most high-profile arrest in the long-running investigation.
“He was arrested for conspiracy and aiding and abetting the Easter Sunday attacks,” an investigating officer told AFP.
“He has been in touch with people involved in the attacks, even recently.”
The coordinated bombings targeted three upmarket hotels in the capital, two Roman Catholic churches, and an evangelical Protestant church outside Colombo.
The attacks were blamed on a home-grown extremist group.
The Catholic church, which has spearheaded a campaign demanding justice for all victims of the brutal bombings, welcomed the arrest as a sign the investigation was continuing.
“What we need is the truth behind the Easter attacks. We want to see justice for all the victims,” Father Cyril Gamini Fernando told AFP.
The church had previously accused successive governments of failing to identify the masterminds behind the bombings.
The string of suicide bombings on April 21, 2019, became the worst attack against civilians in a country where at least 100,000 people had been killed in a Tamil separatist war that ended in May 2009 after nearly four decades of violence.
Sallay, who was promoted to State Intelligence Service (SIS) chief in 2019 after Mr Gotabaya Rajapaksa became president, had been accused of involvement in organising the suicide bombings, a charge he has denied.
His long-expected arrest came ahead of the seventh anniversary of the bombings.
British broadcaster Channel 4 reported in 2023 that Sallay was linked to the Islamist bombers and had met them prior to the attack.
A whistleblower told the network that Sallay had permitted the attack to proceed with the intention of influencing that year’s presidential election in favour of Mr Rajapaksa.
Two days after the bombings, Mr Rajapaksa declared his candidacy and went on to win the November vote by a landslide after promising to stamp out Islamist extremism.
Funding fanatics
A former member of the extremist group told reporters in 2019 that they were originally funded by a military intelligence unit to propagate a fundamentalist ideology in Sri Lanka’s multi-ethnic eastern province.
Sallay was employed in the intelligence unit that funded the extremists. The government at the time admitted the military was behind the radical group.
Sallay was promoted to head the SIS, Sri Lanka’s main intelligence agency, following Mr Rajapaksa’s victory, but was dismissed after Mr Anura Kumara Dissanayake won the presidency in 2024, promising prosecutions of those behind the attacks.
While local extremists were held responsible, Sallay was also accused of orchestrating the attack.
Two days after the bombings, ISIS claimed responsibility, but investigators said they had no evidence to directly establish a foreign link.
Other investigations faulted the authorities for failing to act on warnings
More than 500 people were wounded in the bombings, which crippled the island nation’s lucrative tourism industry.
The US authorities in 2021 charged three Sri Lankans for supporting the Easter attacks, in which five US nationals were killed.
The three are among 25 suspects indicted in Sri Lanka’s High Court.
The Supreme Court fined then-president Maithripala Sirisena and four senior officials more than US$1.03 million (S$1.3 million) in a civil case for their failure to prevent the attacks.
The UN has asked Sri Lanka to publish parts of previous inquiries into the bombings that were withheld from the public. AFP


