The Daily - The Terrorist Attacks in Sri Lanka
Episode Date: April 24, 2019A series of highly coordinated bombings in Sri Lanka has left more than 350 people dead. How did a small, obscure and underfinanced local group carry out one of the deadliest terrorist attacks since 9.../11? Guest: Jeffrey Gettleman, the South Asia bureau chief for The New York Times. For more information on today’s episode, visit nytimes.com/thedaily. Background reading:The Islamic State claimed responsibility for the bombings, but the extent of its involvement is not yet clear.Here’s what we currently know and don’t know about the attacks.
Transcript
Discussion (0)
From The New York Times, I'm Michael Barbaro.
This is The Daily.
Today, a series of highly coordinated bombings
has left more than 300 dead in Sri Lanka.
How did a small, obscure, and under-financed local group
carry out one of the deadliest terror attacks
since 9-11.
It's Wednesday, April 24th.
Jeffrey Gettleman, take me back to a year ago in Sri Lanka.
What was going on in the government there?
The Sri Lankan government was in complete meltdown.
Sri Lanka is a developing country, somewhat isolated.
It's an island off of India.
And for years, it struggled with a very brutal civil war that ended about 10 years ago.
So we are now witnessing the rebirth of this country after decades of bloodshed and dysfunction and confusion and chaos.
And the government is a symptom of all these problems.
A political crisis in Sri Lanka, where the president has sacked the country's entire parliament and called for fresh elections.
You had a division at the highest levels between the president and the prime minister.
They were disputing who was in control.
The president is accused of violating the constitution after he fired the prime minister and appointed a replacement.
And the president then appointed another person to become a new prime minister.
He replaced him with Mahinda Rajapaksa, an ex-president accused of war crimes.
The country's largest party has called the president a tyrant.
The prime minister, they say, should be chosen by parliament, not the president.
It provoked a constitutional crisis with lawmakers threatening to quit.
Police have been called into Sri Lanka's parliament after MPs flung books, chairs and water to stop a no-confidence motion.
The tempers boiled over following discussions over who should lead the country.
Supporters of Sri Lanka's ousted prime minister aren't going to let him go quietly.
And it all stemmed from this very bitter rivalry between the president and the prime minister, which still hasn't been resolved.
And throughout this turmoil that you're describing over the past year, what is happening simultaneously in Sri Lanka?
Well, around the same time in December last year, when this political meltdown was still
a big issue here and the government was dysfunctional, police officials in a small town
in central Sri Lanka learned about a mysterious preacher who had been indoctrinating young Muslim
students and encouraging them to attack Buddhists and Buddhist
statues. They didn't know much about this guy. He was said to be a traveling preacher who had
been run out of his own village because his views were too radical and hateful, and he had been told
to leave. And ever since then, he had been traveling back and forth between India and Sri Lanka,
spreading these very hateful messages that Muslims are the only ones who deserve to be on earth, that Muslims have the
right to kill anybody who's not Muslim, and that anybody who's concerned about these issues should
really take action and strike out against infidels. Sri Lankan government doesn't really take it
seriously. And at the same time, the Indian government, which has a pretty
extensive intelligence network across South Asia and is constantly on the lookout for the rise of
Islamic groups, learns about this guy. And then in early April, India reaches out to Sri Lanka
and says they have specific information. Muhammad Zaharan and his followers are planning suicide attacks across Sri Lanka at churches.
The Indians give the Sri Lankans very detailed information.
The whereabouts of these people, their cell phone numbers, social media information, addresses, names, aliases.
And the Sri Lankans then process the information and put together a security memo
that they circulate among only a few assistant police chiefs. And this memo was dated April 11th,
and it says foreign intelligence agencies have given us information that Mohammed Zaharan is
planning suicide attacks against Catholic churches in Sri Lanka.
But no action is taken.
How can that be possible, that they're not taking any action?
Some people believe it goes back to this political division at the heart of the government,
that the president is so intent on shutting out the prime minister from any security matters
that he's hoarding all this information to himself
and not really doing anything with it. The suspects who are named in the memo are not arrested,
no security is added at churches, and life goes on until April 21st.
At about 8.45 a.m., Easter Sunday, bombs explode at several churches and hotels across Sri Lanka. The story we're following, state media in Sri Lanka report three explosions were at hotels, three other explosions were at churches.
And keep this in mind.
I was actually in New Delhi, and I got a message that a few explosions had been heard and several people were injured.
Over the next couple of hours, we find out that dozens of people have been killed.
The information is still coming through, but the information that we have points to a devastating series of what looks like a series of coordinated attacks.
By the time I bought my plane tickets and was en route to Sri Lanka,
the death toll was nearly 200 people.
It kept rising day by day and is now more than 320 people.
This is the worst violence in Sri Lanka in more than 10 years
since the end of the civil war there.
And the people who were killed were
worshippers, many children,
several dozen
foreign tourists. Sri Lanka has
a large tourism industry,
and there were Americans, British,
Australians,
Indians, Chinese, Turkish,
all killed in these attacks.
And how do Sri Lankan officials respond to the attack early on?
So within hours, they arrest dozens of suspects.
They sweep through the city, Colombo, the capital,
find a safe house with weapons in it, announce that they have arrested accomplices to the attackers. And that raised questions because
it looked like they had known who was behind the attack from the beginning. And shortly after that,
one minister in the government leaks this secret memo dated April 11th that says there was an imminent terrorist attack against Catholic churches in the works.
And the anger begins to build that the government should have arrested these people and fortified the churches before Easter Sunday if they had suspected that there might be some attacks.
And what are the big questions that reporters like you are trying to answer at this moment?
So I was very confused how a local group that nobody's heard of could have accomplished such
a devastating series of attacks. I have covered suicide bombings in other places like Somalia and Iraq.
And I have seen the horror of people blown apart and buildings blown apart by very powerful explosives.
And that's what this looked like. There were six bombs that went off within minutes of each other, and each was incredibly powerful.
To build a bomb like that is complicated.
was incredibly powerful. To build a bomb like that is complicated. To pack explosives into a small carryable package and detonate it effectively in a closed space is the mark of a sophisticated
terrorist organization. They had to have a foreign partner in this. They had to have tapped into some international terror network and received expertise or manpower or weapons to be able to do this because there was no history in Sri Lanka of anything close to this scale. churches on Easter seemed such a spectacular crime against non-Muslims that it just made you wonder
what group out there would have an agenda like that. There really wasn't a local motivation to
do that. There had been no history of bloodshed between Muslims and Christians in Sri Lanka.
So it raised the question of what group outside this country would want to use this country to make a broader point.
And that's when I started thinking about the Islamic State.
CNN has just learned that ISIS is now claiming responsibility for the coordinated Easter Sunday bombings.
The Islamic State says it was behind the multiple suicide blasts,
although it's not offered any proof. And when do we learn more about ISIS's involvement?
It was only into the third day of covering this story, around the clock, hour after hour,
that we begin to hear of an Islamic State connection. On Tuesday morning, we hear that the Islamic State
has claimed this attack.
That's not proof in itself
because, of course,
the Islamic State
is going to want to take credit
for one of the most devastating
terrorist attacks
against Christians
or non-Muslims
in recent years.
That was not proof in itself.
But by Tuesday night,
the Islamic State
released a video of Mohammed Zahran posing with a weapon in front of a black Islamic State flag next to seven men whose faces are covered.
And in the video, he makes a pledge of allegiance to the Islamic State.
And that basically clinches the connection between this little unknown group
and one of the world's deadliest terror organizations.
Jeffrey, did the Sri Lankan government know about this seeming involvement of ISIS ahead of time, when they were getting all those warnings?
Was that in any of those notifications that they were getting beforehand? There was nothing that we knew before today that showed the Sri Lankan government knew there was a Islamic State connection to this group.
In that very detailed memo that lays out the names and addresses and phone numbers,
there was no mention of the Islamic State. And the argument is that even if that was the case,
the security agencies should have still looked more
closely into it because they had detailed information from a credible partner, which
is the Indian government. So that's what's so frustrating is that people in this country
had very detailed information about what this group was planning. The mistake was nobody thought
they were capable of doing it. So I wonder, what does it tell us that this small, local, not well-financed, not all that seriously taken group was able to be harnessed the way it was by ISIS?
I think it shows that there can be a partnership between any radical group, however much you discount them as
inexperienced, under-resourced, not that threatening, eccentric. If they team up with
the Islamic State or a global terror network, they can become incredibly dangerous. And the fact that they're underestimated and dismissed
and ignored is an advantage because then they're able to set a plot like this in motion without
a lot of scrutiny or harassment. But there's something else that was still really perplexing,
which is what does it mean to be connected to the Islamic State?
So these guys here pledge allegiance to this, you know, greater jihadist philosophy. But did they
get training by the Islamic State? Did they send people to Syria? Did the Islamic State send people
here? Did they help them bring in the explosives? How closely were the two sides working together?
We still don't know that.
And who initiated contact?
Was it Mohammad Zaharan who reached out to them and said, I really need your help to accomplish this mission inside Sri Lanka?
Or did the Islamic State spot an opportunity and maybe see some of his videos online and
think, hmm, Sri Lanka is a pretty soft target.
If we want to kill a lot of people, that's a great place to do it. And maybe they cultivated him and used him to accomplish
their agenda. This is the type of stuff that we're trying to figure out. And it's a huge
investigation. The American government has just sent FBI agents here to help. There's lots of
foreign intelligence interest in this incident because
of the high death toll and the way that these attacks unfolded. And it raises a question of
how dangerous these homegrown groups can be, because here was one that nobody was watching,
and it pulled off one of the most devastating, horrific terrorist episodes of recent times.
And it feels at the end of the day like this is bigger than whatever decisions were being made by the Sri Lankan government.
This is about an international terror group looking for local partners
in ways that lots of small governments don't seem to understand.
Yes, but local governments have to deal with these issues on the ground.
There's no international Islamic State equivalent to fight terrorist groups.
You know, these issues are handled on the ground.
Some of the news that came out on Tuesday was that the cardinal of Sri Lanka's Catholic community was furious at the security forces.
And said, if you guys had told me there were threats against churches on
Easter Sunday, I would have told people to stay home. But he wasn't given that information.
And why is the FBI involved here, Jeffrey?
There were a few Americans killed in the attacks. That is a concern to the American government,
and therefore they have some jurisdiction and reason to be here. But it's much bigger than that. What happened here in Sri Lanka
is a very alarming sign for the rest of the world of how to co-opt a local group that has very little
resources and a pretty low profile to commit mass murder. How did this group evolve relatively quickly from the same one
that was defacing statues and little more than that to a group that could blow up churches across
the country within minutes of each other and kill 300 or more people? I think they see this as an
important case to work on because it has these
bigger ramifications. It's the idea that the Islamic State, which has been defeated on the
ground and lost a lot of territory, is still a very powerful virtual force. It can still
indoctrinate people and encourage people and support people to do
these horrific crimes. Whether it has a town or a region in the Middle East that it controls or not,
it's still a deadly force. That's what we all want to figure out is how exactly did these two groups work together to carry this out?
And I think if we know that,
it will help us understand how these groups pull off attacks like this.
And the idea is the better you understand that,
the better chance you have of preventing the next one.
Jeffrey, thank you very much. We appreciate it.
I'm glad to help. Thanks.
On Tuesday, mass funerals began for the victims of Sunday's attacks in Sri Lanka.
Outside of one of the targeted churches, priests held back-to-back ceremonies in a large tent,
several of them for small children.
A few hours later, in a televised speech, Sri Lanka's president acknowledged his government's failure to detect the terror attacks beforehand and vowed to dismiss aides who had failed to act on the warnings.
We'll be right back.
We'll be right back. prescription drugs that help fuel the opioid epidemic. On Tuesday, for the first time, federal authorities brought charges against a major
pharmaceutical distributor and its executives that are usually reserved for street dealers
and cartel leaders. The distributor, Rochester Drug Cooperative, was charged with felony drug
trafficking for its role in spreading the deadly opioid epidemic by failing to report suspicious drug orders from pharmacies.
From 2012 to 2017, it shipped tens of millions of highly addictive oxycodone pills and fentanyl products to pharmacies that it knew were illegally dispensing narcotics.
As a result, Rochester Drug Cooperative, the sixth largest drug distributor in the country,
will pay a fine of $20 million and submit to five years of supervision by an independent monitor.
During the period alleged in the indictment, RDC generated $1.2 billion of revenues from the sale of controlled substances.
Why did they do it? The answer is greed.
That's it for The Daily. I'm Michael Barbaro. See you tomorrow.