Doubts over Islamist group's potential role in Sri Lanka bombings

Sri Lankan officials have blamed a small local group
called National Thowheeth Jama’ath for the bomb attacks on Sunday. It is
unclear whether this assertion is based on new information discovered by
investigators since the atrocity or a notice circulated by Sri Lankan police 10
days before the blasts, which said the group was planning suicide attacks
against churches.
There is a similarly named Islamist organisation
active on the island nation – the Sri Lanka Thowheeth Jama’ath. It is unclear
if this group is the one referred to by the warning, which was based on
information passed to Sri Lankan authorities by a foreign intelligence service,
believed to be either India’s or the US’s.
The SLTJ is small, based in the east of Sri Lanka,
and has been involved in extremist rhetoric as well as being linked to acts of
vandalism against Buddhist statues. Its name describes a movement for the unity
of God, a favourite label adopted by Islamist militants and a key concept in
conservative strands of Islam.
Analysts point out multiple suicide bombings of six
or possibly more targets require a significant logistical operation and months
of planning. Such attackers may detonate their devices alone, but need careful
management by handlers to keep them committed in the days and weeks before.
Large quantities of military-grade explosives would also have been necessary,
as well as safe houses and bomb-making workshops.
The targets – churches and luxury hotels in
high-profile locations – are familiar from many previous attacks by Islamist
extremists in south Asia and beyond. Though western attention has been diverted
by violence closer to home, the region has had a high level of religiously
motivated terrorism for decades. There has also been a surge in Hindu and
Buddhist extremism in recent years.
Islamist militant attacks have largely been the work
of local groups rather than major international organisations such as Islamic
State and al-Qaida, despite the continuing efforts of both to expand in the arc
between Afghanistan and Bangladesh. Each group has built links with local
factions and individuals, working through what are effectively
“subcontractors”.
Sometimes the links have been more direct, however.
At its peak, Isis successfully attracted a very significant number of recruits
from the Maldives, the islands close to Sri Lanka, with which there are strong
transport and commercial links.
From descriptions by witnesses, it appears likely
the attackers were young local men. This would fit a longstanding rule that
almost all terrorist attacks anywhere in the world primarily involve people
living near or even brought up close to their targets.
Much of the focus is also now on the failure of the
Sri Lankan security agencies. A key factor here is the degree to which
different branches and factions within the police, intelligence and military
are aligned with various politicians and political parties.
The telecommunications minister, Harin Fernando,
gave an unwitting example of how politicised the vision of decision-makers can
be. Speaking to BBC Radio 4’s Today programme on Monday, Fernando, who on
Sunday night tweeted images of the memo from the Sri Lankan intelligence
services dated 11 April, which laid out details of a possible planned attack,
said the government also had not ruled out an attempted coup.
“There are so many ways we could look at this, but
right now our biggest priority would be to find what really led these eight or
10 or 12 men to carry out this attack,” he said. “But we are not ruling out a
coup as well.”