• For full details of graphics available/in preparation, see Menu -> Planners
 Sri Lanka Attentate - Fakten infographic
Grafik zeigt die uns bekannten Tatsachen zu den Terroranschlägen in Sri Lanka.
GN39061DE

TERRORISMUS

Was wir über die Attentate in Sri Lanka wissen

By Duncan Mil

April 25, 2019 - Der sogenannte Islamische Staat übernimmt die Verantwortung für die Selbstmordbomben am Ostersonntag in Sri Lanka mit mindestens 359 Toten imd veröffentlichte ein Propagandavideo, in dem die Täter dem IS Führer Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi Treue schwören.

Identified in the video is Zahran Hashim, leader of Sri Lanka’s radical National Thowheeth Jama’ath (NTJ). Hashim was one of two suicide bombers who attacked Colombo’s Shangri-La hotel.

Sri Lanka’s deputy defence minister, Ruwan Wijewardene, told a press conference in the capital, Colombo, that most of the suicide bombers were “well-educated and come from the middle or upper-middle class,” adding that they were “financially quite independent.” One of the suicide bombers studied at Kingston University in the UK and later in Australia.

Wijewardene said that 60 people “have been arrested on possible links to the attacks” and 32 of those are still in custody.

Among those assisting police is Mohammed Yusuf Ibrahim, a wealthy businessman and pillar of the Sri Lankan business community, and his son, 30-year-old Ijas Ahmed Ibrahim.

Police allege that two of the spice mogul’s sons Imsath Ahmed Ibrahim, 33, and Ilham Ahmed Ibrahim, 31 bombed the breakfast buffets at the Cinnamon Grand and Shangri La hotels. The family’s youngest son, Ismail Ahmed Ibrahim remains a fugitive.

During a police raid on Easter Sunday at Ilham Ibrahim’s home near Colombo, his wife Fatima detonated a bomb, killing herself, her three children and three police officers.

Since the attacks, the Sri Lankan authorities have admitted they failed to act on precise intelligence from India’s National Investigation Agency that Hashim and NTJ were plotting to bomb churches.

Sources
PUBLISHED: 25/04/2019; STORY: Graphic News; PICTURES: Associated Press, Facebook, YouTube
Advertisement