Renovation of the Northern railway track to begin next week

Renovation activities of the Northern railway track between Anuradhapura and Omanthai will begin next week.

The Ministry of Transport said the renovation will be carried out from the 5th of January by an Indian company.

Accordingly, the track which was declared opened in 1905 will be closed between Anuradhapura and Omanthai for a period of five months.

Trains will continue to function between Colombo and Anuradhapura while special bus services will be introduced to transport people who travel to Jaffna and Kankesanturai.

The Minister said the section of the track has 213 culverts and 90 bridges and following the completion of renovations, train will be able to increase the speed limits to up to 70kmph.

Accordingly, the journey time between Colombo and Jaffna will be reduced considerably.

Although the renovation activities were due to commence in 2019, due to the COVID-19 crisis and several other issues, they were delayed.

Posted in Uncategorized

Sri Lanka’s inflation at 57.2-pct in December 2022

Sri Lanka’s 12-month inflation in the capital Colombo ease to 57.2 percent in December 2022 from 61 percent in November as prices started to stabilize after interest rates were allowed to go up and the exchange rate was pegged around 360 to the US dollar.

The widely watched Colombo Consumer Price Index fell absolutely 0.2 percent to 243.2 points in November after falling 0.5 percent in the November.

Food prices fell 9.3 percent after falling 1.5 percent a month earlier. The sub-index containing gas fell 1.1 percent.

But clothing, footwear and recreation prices have continued to go up, as relative prices adjusted to the steep fall in the currency after two years of money printing to suppress rates.

Sri Lanka’s central bank hiked policy rates to 15.5 percent in April and pulled back on longer term money printing, allowing market rates to go to around 30 percent.

The exchange rater is pegged around 363 rupees with a surrender rule where banks are forced to sell dollars to the central bank for new liquidity.

The ongoing currency and inflation crisis is the worst in the history of the central bank.

Sri Lanka’s Latin America style central bank was set up in 1950 giving powers to the country’s macro-economists the power to mis-target rates, create currency crisis and high inflation.

Indian PM Modi’s mother dies aged 99

Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s mother Heeraben Modi has died at the age of 99.

She had been admitted to hospital in the western state of Gujarat, where she lived, after her health deteriorated.

“A glorious century rests at the feet of God,” Mr Modi tweeted. He had flown from Delhi to visit her at the hospital on Wednesday evening.

The Indian prime minister often visited his mother to seek her blessings on important occasions and festivals.

Her life and sacrifices had “shaped” his mind, personality and self-confidence, Mr Modi wrote on 18 June when Heeraben turned 99.

“My Mother is as simple as she is extraordinary. Just like all mothers,” he wrote.

They were last seen together in public on 4 December when Mr Modi visited her house during the assembly election in Gujarat, his home state.

Heeraben lived with Mr Modi’s younger brother and his family.

She was born in Visnagar in Gujarat’s Mehsana district in 1923.

“Her childhood was one of poverty and deprivation,” Mr Modi wrote.

As a teen, she was married to Damodardas Mulchand Modi and moved to the town of Vadnagar a few kilometres away.

“In Vadnagar, our family used to stay in a tiny house which did not even have a window, let alone a luxury like a toilet or a bathroom,” Mr Modi wrote in his blog.

He described his mother as punctual, neat and a hard worker. “While working, she would hum her favourite bhajans and hymns,” he wrote.

Heeraben never attended public programmes, Mr Modi wrote, adding that she had only accompanied him to two events – the second one was in 2001, when he first took oath as the chief minister of Gujarat.

“Since then, she has never accompanied me to a single public event,” he wrote.

Though he became India’s prime minister in 2014, Heeraben visited him in Delhi only two years later. Mr Modi had tweeted photos of himself showing her around his official residence.

Months later, when Mr Modi’s government controversially banned 500 and 1,000 rupee notes in a bid to crack down on undeclared wealth, Heeraben was photographed visiting a bank, like millions of Indians, to exchange old notes.

(BBC)

Provincial letters to be removed from number plates

The English letters indicating the province on vehicle number plates will be removed when registering a new vehicle and transferring the ownership of a vehicle.

This will come into effect from January 01, 2023, the Commissioner-General of Motor Traffic Nishantha Anuruddha Weerasingha said addressing a media briefing today.

The letters to identify provinces are added to the number plates when registering vehicles to minimize the inconveniences at vehicular emission tests and annual revenue licence issuance.

However, both customers, as well as the Motor Traffic Department, have encountered many difficulties since the number plates have to be changed at each instance the right of the ownership of the vehicles are transferred between provinces.

Meanwhile, speaking on the demerit point system to be introduced for drivers, Mr. Weerasinghe stated that this initiative is expected to be implemented in the first quarter of 2023.

Accordingly, the proposed demerit point system will be forwarded to the Cabinet of Ministers for its approval after it is published in the government gazette in the first week of January.

The relevant points of the demerit points system will be deducted over traffic offences and it 24 such points are deducted, the driving license of the concerned driver will be suspended for a period of one year.

Following the end of the suspension period, the drivers will have to go through the procedure from the beginning to obtain the driving license once again, he said further, adding that this is intended to reduce the number of lives claimed in motor accidents.

SL shouldn’t go around the world with begging bowl in 2023: Cardinal

Sri Lanka should not go around the world with a begging bowl in 2023, but should establish a new structure to build up the nation, Archbishop of Colombo His Eminence Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith said today.

“We should work towards creating a new structure for the country to move ahead in the New year and we must stop going around the world with a begging bowl. If we don’t do it, the nation will be lost.” The Cardinal said in a special statement.

“Sri Lanka will be marking its 75th year since independence in 2023. Many other nations which became independent alongside Sri Lanka, have moved forward but Sri Lanka has earned the image of being a poor country. We have fallen into such state because of the wrong decisions made by those who have ruled the nation from time to time,” he said.

“Sri Lanka should preserve unity, its people should forget differences and must be united for the sake of the nation during the new year,” Archbishop Ranjith said.

Posted in Uncategorized

Sri Lanka’s Ranil Wickremesinghe is president. But who’s in charge: him, or the Rajapaksas?

Almost six months after Sri Lanka’s ex-leader Gotabaya Rajapaksa fled overseas after mass anti-government protests demanding his resignation, critics say reforms have yet to materialise amid concerns the powerful and wealthy family still controls the nation through someone many say is their proxy, President Ranil Wickremesinghe.

Amid huge demonstrations, which erupted over economic mismanagement that drove the island to bankruptcy and left its citizens grappling with out-of-control living costs and shortages, protesters, also furious at endemic corruption, were clear this year that at least someone from the Rajapaksa family should step down.

Gotabaya, the nation’s first president with a military background – and the first elected president who had never held an elected office before – duly asked his brother Mahinda, the prime minister, to step aside in May. Ranil Wickremesinghe, a former lawyer, was then appointed in his place, a position he had held several times before.

He became acting president, according to constitutional procedures, when Gotabaya fled for the Maldives, then Singapore – he returned to Sri Lanka a few weeks later, although he has headed in recent days to the US.

With Gotabaya apparently, or at least temporarily, gone, parliament formally appointed Wickremasinghe, 73, to lead the nation through some of its darkest days on the back of the votes of the SLPP – led by Mahinda Rajapaksa – a party commanding two thirds of lawmakers.

It has split since the May-July uprising and Mahinda’s brother Basil is now believed to control a major component of it. Among the family, he is the most tainted with corruption allegations.

Ironically, the SLPP had won a landslide victory at the August 2020 polls campaigning against Wickremasinghe, painting him as a national security risk.

Now, though, he is seemingly in charge, but despite this year’s uprising and political shenanigans, many reforms the public wanted are not in sight, including an interim government (not an SLPP-controlled one), a new constitution and a reduction in the president’s executive powers.
“The system change … has not happened,” said Harsha de Silva, an economist and senior member of the opposition Samagi Jana Balavegaya (SJB).

“In fact, it is ironic that the people who ran away are back now … the president, the prime minister and [his brother Basil] the finance minister.” None of the family hold ministerial portfolios, but because they largely control the SLPP since its split, they are believed to be pulling the strings.

“They [the family] are saying that they still have the votes of 6.9 million who voted for them (in 2019) … [that] only maybe 200 to 300 of them [SLPP voters, involved in the protest] at most were associated with the Aragalaya [struggle],” he said.

The SLPP claimed back in 2020 that Wickremasinghe was negotiating secretly with Washington to provide base facilities for US marines in Sri Lanka and sign a deal with the US-controlled Millennium Challenge Corporation (MCC) to pave the way for easier acquisition of state land – especially farming land – by foreign corporations. Wickremasinghe denied the allegations.
However, he not only lost his seat but his UNP party – Sri Lanka’s oldest political party – lost all its seats in parliament. He was only able to ‘sneak’ into parliament through a token seat available for the UNP through the proportional voting system, meaning he is dependent on the SLPP to keep his job.

In other words, like de Silva and others say, there has been no real change of government in Sri Lanka. He says Wickremasinghe “has to ensure that he keeps these guys [the Rajapaksas] afloat” to keep his job.

Meanwhile, none of the family or their allies have been charged with any wrongdoing, and they have often said the nation’s financial difficulties stemmed from the pandemic.

But leaders of the uprising have been charged with damaging and stealing public property during the occupation of government institutions, and police are investigating whether they can be charged under the Prevention of Terrorism Act, enacted in 1979, which rights activists have claimed is “draconian”. The UN wants it repealed but Sri Lanka has refused to do so.

De Silva says Sri Lanka’s political situation is now “utterly confusing because [the Rajapaksas] have found a simple way to be in power by creating a facade. No one has been charged … even though the [UN’s] Human Rights Commission talked about economic crimes against the people of Sri Lanka,” he added.

Many Sri Lankans believe the country has become a pawn in the regional geopolitical contest, with media messaging often about a Chinese “debt-trap” narrative.

In reality, though, Chinese loans only account for about 10 per cent of Sri Lanka’s debts, while those relating to Japan and the Asian Development Bank together constitute over 20 per cent, and international bond markets around 47 per cent, according to Colombo’s Department of External Resources.

A route out of the economic nightmare in the form of a US$2.9 billion International Monetary Fund (IMF) loan has been provisionally agreed, but not signed, delayed due to tricky debt restructuring negotiations with the nation’s creditors, said Shehan Semasinghe, junior finance minister.

Wickremasinghe has not presented any IMF agreement to parliament, as required by democratic norms, said De Silva. “There has been no information … on any specifics of what they have agreed upon even though it has been requested by many in the opposition for a long period of time.”

However, the budget presented to parliament in November by Wickremasinghe, who is also finance minister, includes various things detailed in September’s so-called “staff-level” agreement between the IMF and the nation’s Central Bank.

In a recent commentary published by the Daily Mirror, Jaffna University’s political economist Ahilan Kadirgamar argued that Sri Lankan policymakers are following an IMF prescription of an austerity route that suits Western interests, with the aim of facilitating Sri Lanka to pay off debts to international bond markets.

“Sri Lanka’s debt restructuring is caught in a geopolitical game with global consequences … egged on by neoliberal think tanks and advisers,” he said.

Not everyone thinks the Rajapaksas are pulling a lot of strings behind the scenes. Colombo University’s political sociology and history professor Nirmal Dewasiri agrees there is political confusion. But, he added, even though people say the Rajapaksas are still in power, “the question is, what do you mean by power?”

He said the family “is a massively powerful entity that dominated the entire political landscape in Sri Lanka, since 2005 … but now I don’t think they have the same capacity to dominate [the landscape], it is completely destroyed. You observe that they are still in control simply because of a very technical issue [where the] majority of members in parliament [elected in 2020] are their party [SLPP] people”.

The Rajapaksas were major players in Sri Lankan politics for two decades, subscribing to a Sinhala-Buddhist nationalist ideology that feels Buddhism is under threat by a rising wave of Christian and Islamist forces. Following the 2019 Easter Sunday attacks by alleged Islamic terrorists, there was a huge and successful Sinhala-Buddhist mobilisation to bring the Rajapaksas back to power.

Omalphe Sobitha Mahathera was a leading light of this movement, but later turned against the family and became an outspoken advocate for their removal. He said many Buddhists lost their enthusiasm for Gotabaya because he did not keep his promises.

People also think he had corrupt people around him and damaged the farming sector, the main base of the Sinhala Buddhist vote, through a badly implemented organic farming policy.

Sobitha also said, though, that Aragala was not a religious-based uprising, with citizens across the board, not just Buddhists, understanding “that they need to be saved from these corrupt, lying and manipulative politicians”.

De Silva said that, in the final analysis, Wickremasinghe could dissolve parliament by March next year and call for new elections. But many think he is unlikely to do so and will aim to serve out the rest of his (in fact, Gotabaya’s) term, until November 2024.

Meanwhile, Gotabaya left with his family for the US on December 26; he was a US citizen until 2019 when he relinquished his citizenship to contest the presidency and his son still lives there.
Many young protesters are now threatening to take to the streets again, if the way forward for elections, soon, is not clear. While it cannot be known just how much clout the Rajapaksa clan actually has behind the scenes, what is clear is that they still have the ability to make a lot of people’s blood boil.

Source:South China Morning Post

Posted in Uncategorized

Douglas tells Prez to devolve all Provincial powers

Minister of Fisheries and Eelam People’s Democratic Party (EPDP) Leader Douglas Devananda yesterday (28) said in Jaffna that he had urged President Ranil Wickremesinghe to devolve all powers to the provincial level.

While addressing a media briefing, he further stated that all the powers of the provinces that were taken over with the Executive power granted to the President should be handed back to the Provincial Councils.

Furthermore, Devananda stated that he has a dual role in this regard, as both a representative of the Cabinet sub-committee to resolve the Tamil national ethnic question, and as a leader of a political party at the all-party conference.

“I have emphasised to the President that powers that were devolved when the 13th Amendment to the Constitution was created should be handed back to the provinces,” he added.

Devananda also noted that he is ready to work with the Tamil parties who can act in a transparent and practical manner in matters related to the political aspirations of the Tamil people.

“It is a success to my political career since the 35-year approach of the EPDP is now being followed by the other Tamil parties as well, which is that a political solution to the national ethnic question should start with the 13th Amendment and be taken forward,” he added.

Meanwhile, addressing the all party conference on 13 December, Devananda said: “I strongly believe that I have the right to talk on behalf of the Tamil community because for more than 45 years I have been involved in that. So, I have the right to talk. First, I agree with Tamil National Alliance Leader MP R. Sampanthan that until May 1987, I had one opinion, and that I now harbour a different opinion. Now, discussing reconciliation, I want to term it national reconciliation. After the Indo-Sri Lanka agreement, the Tamil community received many opportunities. Unfortunately, they have misused these. I have the right to talk about that.

“We have to settle these issues with the 13th Amendment. For the last 35 years, we have been advocating to start with a political solution, with the 13th Amendment. First, we should start the reconciliation with all communities and then we should go further. We don’t need to go for a new Constitution because if you want to go for a new Constitution, we need a two-thirds majority and a referendum. At this juncture, for this country, it is impossible. First, we should start with the implementation of the 13th Amendment and through that, we can settle all issues.”

Accordingly, further discussions are scheduled to be held on the matter from 10 to 13 January 2023.

Why only politicians, why not the clergy, too? By N Sathiya Moorthy

Recently, Ven Kappitiyagoda Sirivimala Thera, Anunayake of the Rajopavanaramadhipati Ramanna Nikaya of Gatambe, reportedly asked politicians to take to voluntary retirement at 60 and make way for the younger generation.

He cited a recent official circular on the matter, and President Ranil Wickremesinghe’s defence of the same and asked if doctors, engineers and other professionals should retire at 60, the same law should apply to the political class as well.

“The Prime Minister has issued a circular in this regard stating that at the age of sixty, all State employees should retire. This means that after the age of 60, people experience physical, mental, and health problems, as well as other weaknesses, so the retirement age has been set at 60 years, as recommended by doctors. How can politicians work after sixty years?” he asked at a local function. He went on to add that it was a grave injustice that only state employees have to retire at sixty.

“How can politicians work if state employees cannot?” the Thera asked. “This is an amusing fact. We, the Maha Sangha, believe that politicians in this country should voluntarily retire at the age of 60 and make opportunities available to young people who can work. Otherwise, there is no reason to stay in Parliament until you walk with a walking stick. Many people define public service as serving themselves. Because of the privileges, many do not even consider retiring from Parliament,” he said.

Parliament was the most powerful place in the country to take decisions and make laws, the Thera underlined “How can people who can’t think and whose health has deteriorated work to build a country?” he queried. “If there are academics or other people over the age of sixty, they can get their services by forming a voluntary parliamentary advisory council,” he opined.

As the Thera pointed out, “Despite claims that there is no money to do anything in the country, the number of ministers continues to grow. They are attempting to spend and sell the country’s resources to accomplish this.” He wanted all such tings to stop, and that everyone should come together and work to lift the country out of the abyss it has fallen into, even if only for a short time.

Wresting the initiative

At first reading, the Thera’s proposal sounds not only interesting but also welcome. Given the nebulous public opinion that is yet to settle down after the nation-wide Aragalaya protests and the shortages that caused it, there may be many unthinking takers for the idea.

That is because there is a prevailing opinion that the Aragalaya was against the political class, ageing or otherwise. Some reduce it to a protest against the ruling Rajapaksas of the time. The truth, as it is unfolding, is that the Aragalaya protests were caused by shortages.

Whether it was the Rajapaksas or any other ‘corrupt’ politician at the helm, people would have continued to mind their business as always but for the sudden shock administered by shortage of food and forex and consequent price rises that too became uncontrollable. In the end, only the experienced political class that restored some sense to the madness that was unfolding in the Aragalaya’s fringes and threatened to take over the core. Because Parliament was near-united in wresting back the political and constitutional initiatives from the streets, democracy has possibly survived inn the country, to this day.

Yet, nothing explains the way protestors burnt down the homes and businesses of about 80 politicians across the country, laid siege on the President’s office, forcibly occupied the official residence of the President, and later set then Prime Minister’s personal residence afire. Waking up belatedly – or, it seemed so, then and since – the security forces stalled the protestors’ repeated attempts to take over Parliament as the seat of power, about which alone the Thera has spoken.

Unsustainable, impractical

The Thera’s is an unsustainable argument and impractical suggestion. The youth, about whom the Thera has spoken, were at the vanguard of the Aragalaya protests, wherever held. The majority of arsonists and other violent violators belonged among them. That at least goes by the relative age-profile of the protestors that the police have since arrested for specific offences, including arson and squatting in the President’s office and residence, which in a way are national symbols.

Yes, there is a point in what the Thera has said about the old not willing to give the young their space, and preparing them to take over from them in their time. Whether coincidence or otherwise, this has increased so much under the Executive Presidential system, though it is not directly linked.

Though the Provincial Councils and provincial administrations were hoped to become the training ground for future generation leaders just as local government institutions were thought to be recruiting agencies for political parties, neither have actually led to the emergence of national-level leaders with live grassroots-level contacts and continuing connect. Instead, national leaders are born straight as such, whether or not they are born into ‘ruling families’ like the Wijewardenes, Bandaranaikes, Rajapaksas and also the Premadasas.

The list of ‘political families’ in the country is legion. The irony is as much as the majority Sinhala polity, even minority Tamil, Upcountry Tamil and Muslim polity has leaders who have grown roots and refuse to allow a second generation to grow under their guidance and care. The fact is that already the third and fourth generation are ready to come up, but have no space or encouragement. Suffice is to point out, LTTE’s Prabhakaran went as far as to physically eliminate competition, present and future.

Politicians, influencers

Yet, the question remains if the oldies among our political class should be forcibly recruited. Or, if the Thera should have advised professionals that are retiring from government service to join active public life, whether as politicians or opinion-makers or influencers, so that their vast and varied experience and expertise could guide the people and force the policy-makers to do the right thing, the right way.

They could train the younger minds in the right direction, again in the right way. All of it takes time, effort and commitment – which the retirees should be prepared to offer the nation. But then, they should also give up the old ‘my-way-or-the-highway’ attitude, which is what differentiates the political class from the professionals.

The problem is that in the name of accommodation, the political class has made defection and corruption a part of their being. A near-permanent influencer group, in the place of an eruptive Aragalaya protestors, could make the actual and lasting difference. At least, there is no harm in trying.

God and King

This is where the question also arises if religion and religious leaders should get involved in politics and policy-making on a daily and hourly basis. Yes, the majority Sinhala-Buddhist clergy, starting with the prelates and the Maha Sangha are known to influence the rural voters, and hence the top politicians, in turn.

Why, all through, Buddhist monks, especially those that are in normal universities, have been constantly taking sides in political and politicised protests on campuses and outside, too. It is pertinent to note that among the few that have been detained under the otherwise dreaded Prevention of Terrorism Act (PTA), there are young men of robes, too. No one has contested it in any serious manner, as possibly the police have their video-shots while in action.

It is one thing for Buddhism being the ‘State religion’ (which itself the Tamils in particular contest vehemently) but it is another issue altogether for the Buddhist clergy to be seen as influencing political decisions, whether they are constitutional matters like ‘official religion’ and ‘official language’ or any other, where the dividing red-line between God and King have to be drawn, thick and clear. The line between Lord Spiritual and Lord Temporal, so to say, should be inviolable, and it is the former that has to ensure that they remain on the right side of the crease.

As things have unfolded since the Easter Sunday terror-attacks, the Catholic Church, especially Malcolm Cardinal Ranjith, the Archbishop of Colombo, has become both vocal and vociferous on everything politics. The issues that caused the Aragalaya protests has become a convenient tool for His Eminence to espouse his cause on multiple issues unconnected to God, religion and theosophy.

To be fair to the nation’s Muslims and their mullahs (otherwise ridiculed elsewhere in the world), it is now on record that they were the ones who had egged on their politicos and also the Government of the day about the suspicious movements and activities of Zahran & Co in the long run-up to the Easter attacks. No one wants to give them the credit that is due to either the Muslim clergy or the community at large, though there are also errant elements, especially young, who needed to be straightened up, one way or the other.

Last words

The Tamils do not have an organised religious structure, unlike in the other three communities. Whether it is the Sri Lankan Tamil (SLT) community or the Upcountry Tamils, their ‘kovils’ and their priests are not institutionalised in a way of the other three religions for them to issue sermons or fatwas or whatever to their laity.

Yes, during the LTTE days, many of the kovil priests might have sympathised with the cause and even the methods, but they could not have recruited even one cadre, militant or otherwise, even if they had desired or tried. The Hindu social structure is such that the division is very clearly laid out. Attempts by the likes of Velan Swamigal, a mutt/monastery head in the Tamil to create a new political space, has not succeeded beyond creating a few momentary ripples.

Independent of faiths and their clergy, Thomas Cardinal Wolsey’s last words in Shakespeare’s ‘Henry VIII’ should hold a candle, prophetic, for all times and for all-comers: “Had I but served my God with half the zeal I served my King, He would not have in my age have left me naked to mine enemies…”

And thereby hangs a tale!

(The writer is a policy analyst & political commentator, based in Chennai, India. Email: sathiyam54@nsathiyamoorthy.com)

Submitting arrival and departure cards made available online

The Department of Immigration & Emigration has facilitated the arrival and departure cards, required to be filled by inbound foreigners and outbound Sri Lankans, to be submitted online.

Accordingly, all foreign travellers arriving in Sri Lanka and locals departing the country can complete the cards online via the official website of the department or the following link: https://eservices.immigration.gov.lk/emb/eEmbarkation/

This facility is available with effect from January 01, 2023, according to the Government Information Department.

Air travellers are required to submit the arrival and departure cards three days prior to their journey.

This facility was made available to minimize the inconveniences experienced by air passengers at the airport when completing their immigration and emigration formalities, the Controller General of Immigration and Emigration, Harsha Illukpitiya stated.

Posted in Uncategorized

IS member connected with Zahran held for links with Coimbatore blast suspects: NIA

The National Investigation Agency (NIA) on Wednesday arrested a member of terrorist organisation Islamic State (IS) who was in touch with the mastermind of 2019 Easter Day bombings in Sri Lanka, for his alleged links with suspects in the October 23 blast in Tamil Nadu’s Coimbatore.

The federal agency also arrested another man, identified as Sanofar Ali, for allegedly taking part in plans to carry out terror attacksin the country.

NIA officers familiar with the developments said IS member Sheikh Hidayatullah was allegedly in touch with Maulvi Zahran bin Hashim, the mastermind of the deadly Easter Sunday bombings in Sri Lanka on April 21, 2019 that claimed over 250 lives.

Both Hidayatullah and Sanofar Ali were arrested from Tamil Nadu, an NIA officer said.

“Investigations have revealed that the accused persons had entered into a criminal conspiracy in the interior of forested regions of Asanoor and Kadambur areas of Sathyamangalam forest, Erode district, in February 2022,” NIA said in a statement. “The meetings were led by previously arrested accused Umar Farooq and participated by deceased accused Jameesha Mubeen (died in Coimbatore blast), along with Mohammed Azharuddin ,Sheikh Hidayatullah and Sanofar Ali, where they conspired to prepare for and execute terror acts.”

Jameesha Mubeen, who was questioned by NIA in 2019 for alleged terror links, was charred to death in suspicious circumstances after the LPG cylinder inside a Maruti 800 he was driving exploded near Kottai Eswaran temple in Coimbatore’s Ukkadam on the morning of October 23. The incident took place around 200 metres from a police patrol.

The deceased was registered as the prime accused in the blast case. The state police had invoked the stringent Unlawful Activities (Prevention) Act (UAPA) in the case, which was later handed over to NIA.

According to NIA officers cited above, Hidayatullah, who has been propagating IS ideology since 2017, was earlier arrested along with Azharuddin in June 2019. He was released on bail in 2020. Azharuddin from Ukkadam and leader of Kerala-Tamil Nadu IS module is currently in jail for the Sri Lanka bombings.

All the above accused were inspired by Hashim, who masterminded and executed the Sri Lanka bombings — in which 252 people were killed — and planned to carry out similar attacks in two south Indian states at that time.

Prior to the Sri Lanka bombings, Hidayatullah and Hashim were in touch through a Facebook page “KhilafahGFX”, according to NIA’s charge sheet filed against Hidayatullah in 2019.

(Hindustan Times)