Sri Lanka imposes nationwide curfew as mobs attack mosques - Action News
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Sri Lanka imposes nationwide curfew as mobs attack mosques

One person was killed in Sri Lanka on Monday as police fired tear gas at mobs attacking mosques in the worst outbreak of sectarian violence since the Easter bombings by Islamist militants.

Attacks come in the wake of the deadly Easter Sunday bombings

Abbraar Masjid mosque is seen after a mob attack in Kiniyama, Sri Lanka on May 13, 2019. (Dinuka Liyanawatte/Reuters)

One person was killed in Sri Lanka on Monday as police fired tear gas at mobs attacking mosques and Muslim-owned shops and imposed a curfew after the worst outbreak of sectarian violence since the Easter bombings.

The April 21 attacks, claimed by the extremist group ISIS, targeted churches and hotels, mostly in Colombo, killing more than 250 people and fuelling fears of a backlash against the island nation's minority Muslims.

An officer at the MarawilaHospital said a 42-year-old man admitted to the hospital with stab wounds had died.

Residents in Muslim parts of the country's North Western Province said mobs had attacked mosques and damaged shops and businesses owned by Muslims for a second day.

"There are hundreds of rioters, police and army are just watching. They have burnt our mosques and smashed many shops owned by Muslims," a resident of the Kottampitiya area told Reuters by telephone, asking not to be identified for fear of reprisals.

"When we try to come out of our house, police tell us to stay inside."

A Muslim man walks inside the Abbraar Masjid mosque after a mob attack in Kiniyama, Sri Lanka. (Dinuka Liyanawatte/Reuters)

Nationwide curfew imposed

Police imposed a nationwide curfew from 9 p.m. to 4 a.m., spokespersonRuwan Gunasekera said.

Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe said in a statement that acts of sabotage were hampering an investigation by security forces and warned that "if the racism rises upand peace is disturbed the country will be destabilized."

"The intention of these groups who are causing violence is to cause disruption in public lifeand destabilize the country," he said.

A Sri Lankan security personnel inspects a car on a controlled roadside in Colombo after the government imposed a nationwide night curfew. (Lakruwan Wanniarachchi/AFP/Getty Images)

Wickremesinghe said he had given powers to the security forces to take strong action against those disturbing the peace.

A police source said police had fired tear gas to disperse mobs in some places in North Western Province.

A Reuters reporter saw a mob of several dozen young Sinhalese men wielding sticks and rods in what appeared to be a standoff in the town of Madulla in North Western Province.

Many anxious Muslims were hunkering down at home, but young men, some of them carrying rods, were still zipping around on motorbikes, despite regional curfews from 2 p.m. before the nationwide curfew was imposed.

Muslims make up nearly 10 per cent of Sri Lanka's 22 million people who are predominantly Sinhalese Buddhists.

Mosques attacked

Glass was strewn across the Abbraar Masjid mosque in the town of Kiniyama that was attacked overnight. All the windows and doors of the soft pink building were smashed and copies of the Qur'anwere thrown onto the floor.

A mosque official said the attacks were triggered when several people, including some Buddhist monks, demanded a search of the main building after soldiers had inspected a 43-hectarelake nearby.

Authorities suspect lakes and wells are being used as hiding places to conceal weapons.

Muslim men stand in front of the Abbraar Masjid mosque after a mob attack in Kiniyama, Sri Lanka. (Dinuka Liyanawatte/Reuters)

A 34-year-old man who was at the mosque said about 150 to 200 people came towardthe mosque with rods and swords on Sunday, but the Muslims who were in the mosque persuaded them to go away with the help of the police.

But they came back and this time there were about 1,300 people. The Muslims, huddled in the mosque, asked the police to fire in the air to disperse the mob, but the police said the people wanted to inspect the mosque for weapons.

Then the crowd surged into the mosque and ransacked it, the witness said.

"They destroyed and burned Qur'ans, broke every glass window and door and urinated on the water storage which Muslims used to take ablution," he said.

Police spokespersonGunasekera did not respond to a request for comment on the incident. But in an emailed statement, he said there had been some damage to property in the Hettipola area of the Kurunegala district, but no injuries reported.

The police source said police also fired in the air the Hettipola area.

Social media banned temporarily

Authorities also imposed a temporary ban on social media networks and messaging apps, including WhatsApp, after a clash in another part of the country was traced to a dispute on Facebook.

Several dozen people threw stones at mosques and Muslim-owned stores and a man was beaten in the Christian-majority town of Chilaw on the west coast on Sunday in the dispute that started on the social media site, police sources and residents told Reuters.

Authorities said they arrested the author of theFacebook post, identified as 38-year-old Abdul Hameed Mohamed Hasmar, whose online comment "oneday you will cry" was interpreted as threatening violence.

Sri Lanka blocked access to Facebook and WhatsApp on Monday after a posting sparked anti-Muslim riots across several towns in the latest fallout from the Easter Sunday suicide attacks. (Lakruwan Wanniarachchi/AFP/Getty Images)

"Social media blocked again as a temporary measure to maintain peace in the country," Nalaka Kaluwewa, director general of the government information department, told Reuters on Monday.

On Twitter, Sri Lanka's leading mobile phone operator, Dialog Axiata Plc, said it had also received instructions to block the apps Viber, IMO, Snapchat, Instagram and YouTube until further notice.