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The Sri Lankan Army chief has said that some of the suicide bombers who carried out the country's worst terror attack on Easter Sunday, 21 April, had visited Kashmir and Kerala for "some sort of training" or to "make some more links" with other foreign outfits.
Nine suicide bombers, including a woman, carried out a series of devastating blasts that tore through three churches and three luxury hotels, killing 253 people and injuring over 500 others.
In an interview to BBC, Lieutenant General Mahesh Senanayake, Commander of the Army, divulged some details on the movements of the suspects in the region and also international links.
Asked what activities they were doing in Kashmir and Kerala, the Army chief said: "Not exactly, but definitely in some sort of training or to make some more links towards the other organisations outside the country".
Sri Lanka banned the NTJ and arrested over 100 people in connection with the blasts.
About the possibility of the involvement of a foreign group, the Commander said that by looking at the pattern of operation and the places that the suspects travelled, there had to have been outside involvement of some leadership or instructions.
Asked why the threats were not taken more seriously after receiving information from India, Senanayake said:
He said that as the Chief of the Army, he believes that everybody who is responsible for intelligence-gathering and the national security is to be blamed, including those in the political hierarchy.
Asked why Sri Lanka was targeted, the Commander said: "Too much of freedom, too much of peace for the last 10 years. People forget what happened for 30 years. People are enjoying peace and they neglected security".
He was referring to the three-decade civil war with the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) which ended in 2009 after claiming at least 100,000 lives.
"We are deployed on the ground to give confidence to the public and ensure there is no violence or escalation of communal riots in this country. Have trust in the armed forces and the police of this country who will bring normalcy as soon as possible," the Army chief added.
There is no record to suggest that any of the suicide bombers who carried out the Easter attacks in Sri Lanka had visited Kashmir as claimed by the Army chief of the island nation, officials of central security agencies said.
One of the officials said immigration records were re-visited after the terrorist attacks and none of the bombers had visited Kashmir.
However, there could be a possibility of the bombers visiting the state using pseudonym, the official said, adding if Sri Lanka hands over some evidence, it can be verified from the ground.
Sri Lanka Army's chief has said that some of the suicide bombers, who carried out the country's worst terror attack, visited Kashmir and Kerala for "some sorts of training" or to "make some more links" with other foreign outfits.
(This piece has inputs from two PTI copies.)
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