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A series of eight coordinated blasts ripped through three churches and three high-end hotels frequented by tourists and left 500 people injured in the country’s deadliest violence since the devastating civil war ended in 2009.
Government spokesperson Rajitha Senaratne said that the warnings about the blasts were received in the days before the attacks, the CNN reported.
“We saw the warnings and we saw the details given,” he said. “We are very, very sorry, as a government we have to say — we have to apologise to the families and the institutions about this incident,” Senaratne, also the health minister, said.
All the families would be compensated and churches rebuilt, he said.
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“There must be a wider international network behind it,” he said. Seven suicide bombers believed to be NTJ members carried out the series of blasts.
However, no group has claimed responsibility for the attacks, but police have arrested 40 people – mostly members of the NIJ – in connection with the blasts.
In the wake of bombings, the military has been given a wider berth to detain and arrest suspects powers that were used during the civil war but withdrawn when it ended.
Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe said he feared the massacre could unleash instability and pledged to “vest all necessary powers with the defense forces” to act against those responsible.