News
‘Kith and kin of Easter Sunday bombers were to carry out second wave of attacks’
by Rathindra Kuruwita
State Intelligence Service (SIS) had warned the the IGP, on April 25, that family members and close relations of those who had carried out the Easter Sunday attacks would launch a second wave of attacks targeting hospitals, shopping malls, supermarkets, police stations and the Indian High Commission, former SIS Director SDIG Nilantha Jayawardena yesterday informed the Presidential Commission of Inquiry (PCoI) investigating the Easter Sunday attacks.
Jayawardene added that those killed during the Saindamarudu safe house explosion on April 26, 2019 were some of the terrorists tasked with carrying out the second wave of terror. Earlier it was revealed before the commission that 12 National Thawheed Jamaat (NTJ) members had remained in the East mount attacks in August 2019 and that they had been killed at the Saindamarudu safe house.
Jayawardena said that he had also submitted a report containing the names the remaining close associates of NTJ leader Zaharan Hashim on 24 April, 2019 to the SDIG of the Criminal Investigations Department (CID). He told the PCoI that they wanted to dismantle Zaharan’s network.
“There was no going back for those in the close circle. They would carry out a second wave of attacks. And I also sent a team of SIS officers from Colombo to the East to assist our designated officer there,” he said.
Among the group of remaining associates was Mohamed Zaharan Fazlur Rahman, who lived in Matale. Jayawardena said Rahman had sent the ISIS evidence to show that Zahran and others were adherents of ISIS.
it was only after receiving this that ISIS had claimed the responsibility for attacks, Jayawardena said.
Jayawardena also said that by April 24 they had identified 11 men and 6 women capable of launching a series of suicide attacks.
Jayawardena said that they had received information warning that militants dressed in army uniform were planning to launch the attack using vans. There were reports of possible attacks targeting five locations, including Batticaloa, and that another attack could be carried out targeting people arriving to see the devastation after the initial attacks.”
SIS had sent information to the relevant officials including the secretary to the Ministry of Defence, the Chief of National Intelligence, the IGP, as well as the Chief of Defense Staff (CDS).
Asked by members of the PCoI why the letter had been forwarded to the CDS, Jayawardene said that he had been instructed to forward the reports prepared by the SIS to the CDS at the National Security Council (NSC) meeting on 22 April, 2019.
Asked by the Additional Solicitor General, who led the evidence who had attended the NSC meeting on 22 April, 2019, Jayawardene said former President Maithripala Sirisena, Defence Secretary and Secretary to the President had been present. The witness said that he did not remember whether former Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe or State Minister of Defence Ruwan Wijewardene had been present at the meeting. He further said that the then IGP Jayasundara had also attended the NSC meeting held on that day for the first time since October 2018.
Jayawardena also submitted a letter sent by the IGP, warning senior Police officials, that they had received information that some groups could attack mosques. Through that letter, the IGP had instructed the Police officials to meet the moulavis and inform them of the dangers of such an attack, Jayawardena added.
News
Implementation of water supply projects in small town and rural areas.
Access to safe drinking water for populations residing in small towns and rural areas of Sri Lanka has not yet been fully ensured, and this continues to pose a major challenge to the country’s social and economic development.
With a view to overcome this situation, a programme has been planned to provide clean drinking water to approximately 600,000 families living in semi-urban and rural areas through the implementation of 300 projects covering 50 small towns and rural areas.
The projects are aimed at establishing safe, reliable and sustainable drinking water supply systems, with water to be treated through modern purification technologies, including chlorination and filtration systems, in conformity with national and international drinking water standards.
Accordingly, having considered the resolution furnished by the Minister of Housing, Construction and Water Supply, the Cabinet of Ministers granted approval for the implementation of the proposed programme by the National Water Supply and Drainage Board and the National Community Water Supply Department during the period 2027–2029, subject to the conduct of a feasibility study on the proposed programme and inclusion in the Public Investment Programme based on its outcome.
News
Cabinet nod to submit Import and Export (Control) Regulations No. 04 of 2026 to Parliament for its concurrence
Hydrochlorofluorocarbons (HCFCs), which are chemical compounds widely used in refrigerators and air conditioning units, are being globally phased out under the Montreal Protocol due to their high potential for ozone layer depletion and global warming.
Sri Lanka has likewise committed to phasing out these chemical substances by the year 2030 in a stepwise manner. Accordingly,
regulations under the Import and Export (Control) Act, No. 1 of 1969, namely the Import and Export (Control) Regulations No. 04 of 2026, published in Extraordinary Gazette Notification No. 2487/29 dated 2026-05-07, have been issued, prohibiting, with effect from 2026-06-06, the importation of equipment and appliances that operate solely on hydrochlorofluorocarbons, and prohibiting, with effect from 2028-01-01, the importation of compressors used as components in refrigeration systems of equipment and appliances that operate solely on hydrochlorofluorocarbons.
Accordingly, the Cabinet of Ministers has approved the resolution furnished by the President in his capacity as
the Minister of Finance, Planning and Economic Development to submit the aforementioned Regulations to Parliament for its concurrence.
News
Declaration of Elephant Migratory Corridors to minimize HEC in Monaragala and Hambantota districts
Wild elephants inhabit approximately two-thirds of the land area of Sri Lanka, and it has been identified that the rapid obstruction of elephant habitats and migratory corridors due to various development projects and human activities has directly contributed to the escalation of human–elephant conflict.
It has been recognised that, in order to mitigate such conflict to a certain extent, the protection of wild elephant habitats and migratory corridors must be undertaken as a matter of urgency.
The Department of Wildlife Conservation is currently engaged in identifying wild elephant migratory corridors in collaboration with relevant Divisional Secretaries, stakeholder agencies, and organisations.
Under the Wild Elephant Migratory Corridor Identification Programme in Monaragala District, the Wild Elephant Migratory Corridor from Handapanagala to Demodara
across Menik Ganga (River Menik) up to Yala National Park has been identified, and approval has been granted by the Monaragala District Coordinating Committee for that.
The Elephant Migratory Corridor from Yala National Park’s Zone VI -Lunugamvehera National Park to Udawalawe National Park has already been declared as the Wetahira Kanda Nature Reserve in 2002.
Within this area, five (05) licensed land plots have been identified, and these lands have not yet been developed.
Accordingly, the Cabinet of Ministers has approved the resolution furnished by the Minister of Environment to take the following measures:
To declare, under the provisions of the Flora and Fauna Protection Ordinance, the elephant migratory corridor from Handapanagala in Monaragala District to Demodara across Menik Ganga up to Yala National Park as a sanctuary.
To provide alternative land outside the wildlife reserve area in lieu of the five (05) licensed land plots located within the Wetahira Kanda Nature Reserve area, and to re-declare the Wetahira Kanda Nature Reserve as an elephant migratory corridor.
To acquire, upon payment of compensation, land parcels containing buildings constructed in a manner that obstruct the Koholankala elephant corridor in the Hambantota District, and to declare the relevant area of the Hambantota Wild Elephant Management Reserve as a sanctuary.
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