Leave my country alone, Sri Lanka president tells Daesh

Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena said a
foreign mastermind may have planned the Easter Sunday bombings, claimed by
Islamic State, telling the militant group to “leave my country alone”.
Sirisena also warned it may be possible Islamic
State had launched a “new strategy” by targeting smaller countries, Sky New
said on Wednesday.
A government source told Reuters on Tuesday police
and other security forces across the Buddhist-majority country had been ordered
to remain on high alert because the militants were expected to try to strike
again, before the holy month of Ramadan which starts on Monday.
Sirisena said authorities were aware of “a small
group” of Sri Lankans who had traveled abroad to receive training from Islamic
State over the past decade.
Investigations revealed the bombs used in the Easter
attacks were made locally, the president said in the interview.
The suicide bombings on hotels and churches killed
more than 250 people, including 40 foreign nationals.
Police suspect members of two previously
little-known groups - National Thawheedh Jamaath and Jammiyathul Millathu
Ibrahim - of carrying out the attacks.
On Monday, Islamic State’s media network published a
video message purporting to come from its leader, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, which
would be his first appearance since declaring the jihadists’ now-defunct
“caliphate” five years ago.
In the video, a bearded man with Baghdadi’s
appearance says the Sri Lanka bombings were Islamic State’s response to losses
in its last territorial stronghold of Baghouz in Syria.
In the Sky News interview, Sirisena said he had a
message for Islamic State: “Leave my country alone.”
Sri Lankan authorities have previously said that
they suspect the attackers had international links, although the precise nature
of those connections aren’t known. The U.S. Federal Bureau of Investigation and
Interpol, as well as other undisclosed foreign agencies, are helping Sri Lanka
with the probe.
Local intelligence officials believe that Zahran
Hashim, a Tamil-speaking preacher from the east of the Indian Ocean island
country, may have been a key player in plotting the Easter bombings. Officials
believe he was one of nine suicide bombers.