Sri Lanka troops launch major hunt for militants linked to suicide attacks

Sri Lanka’s military launched a major hunt Saturday
for remnants of an militant group which carried out the Easter suicide bombings
that killed 258 people, officials said.
Several Colombo suburbs were targeted by troops
using emergency powers on arrests and detentions adopted after the April 21
attacks.
“Special cordon-and-search operations are under way
in three areas just outside Colombo,” a military official told reporters.
Similar operations were also carried out in the
country’s north-west, where anti-Muslim riots this month left one man dead and
hundreds of Muslim-owned shops, homes and mosques destroyed.
Security forces have arrested scores of suspects in
connection with the bombings and over what appeared to be organized violence
against the island’s Muslim minority.
While authorities say the immediate militant threat
has been blunted, President Maithripala Sirisena on Wednesday extended for one
month the 30-day state of emergency imposed after the suicide bombings.
Sirisena said the move was to maintain “public
security,” with the country still on edge after the attacks on three hotels and
three churches that were blamed on a local militant group, the National
Thowheeth Jama’ath (NTJ).
The Daesh group has also claimed a role in the
attacks.
Christians make up 7.6 percent and Muslims 10
percent of mainly Buddhist Sri Lanka.