BFF-40 Sri Lanka policeman defies president to testify at attack probe

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Sri Lanka policeman defies president to testify at attack probe

COLOMBO, June 18, 2019 (BSS/AFP) – A Sri Lankan police officer on Tuesday
defied President Maithripala Sirisena and testified before a parliamentary
investigation into the Easter Sunday suicide bombings that killed 258 people.

Sirisena has come in for major criticism after ordering top brass not to
allow police, military or intelligence personnel to take part in hearings
into the attacks being held by a parliamentary committee.

The president, who has said the hearings could reveal classified
information, is accused by critics of presiding over a security and
intelligence apparatus which ignored warnings that could have prevented the
attack on three churches and luxury hotels.

On Tuesday the committee heard evidence — much of it in camera — from
Inspector N. B. Kasthuriarachchi, who had been in charge of an area where the
bombing mastermind was based before he went underground in the months prior
to the attack.

Deputy parliamentary speaker Ananda Kumarasiri opened the hearing with a
warning to public servants that refusing to cooperate with the committee
could lead to a 10-year jail term.

“Anyone who refuses to appear… or withholds any evidence, will be
violating the parliamentary privileges act and will be liable to punishment,”
he said.

The state telecommunication service provider, which previously broadcast
live proceedings of the hearing on cable TV, stopped doing so after a
presidential order two weeks ago.

They can still be followed, however, on the parliament website as well as
private news channels broadcasting proceedings on social media platforms such
as Facebook.

Two weeks ago Sirisena sacked national intelligence chief Sisira Mendis
after he testified that the attacks could have been prevented.

Mendis said the president had failed to hold regular security meetings to
assess the threat from Islamic radicals who carried out the bombings.

Defence secretary Hemasiri Fernando and police chief Pujith Jayasundara
also suggested Sirisena did not follow proper protocol in dealing with a
specific intelligence warning from India.

Fernando was forced to resign, while Jayasundara has been suspended from
duty.

New Delhi shared detailed information about the targets and method of
attack as early as April 4, gleaned from a jihadist in Indian custody, but
the intelligence was not acted on.

BSS/AFP/RY/1652 hrs