Roman Catholic bishops urge Sri Lanka govt to release blast inquiry
COLOMBO: Sri Lanka’s Roman Catholic bishops said that they are suspicious of the government’s motives in not sharing the report of a presidential commission of inquiry into Easter Sunday suicide bomb attacks in 2019 that killed more than 260 people, and instead appointing another committee to study it, according to The Associated Press.
The Rev. Winston Fernando, the head of the Catholic Bishops’ Conference of Sri Lanka, said the church was alarmed by President Gotabaya Rajapaksa’s decision last week to appoint a new six-member committee of government ministers to study the report without sharing it with the church or the attorney general for the prosecution of suspects.
“We have a lot of doubts about this whole process, the whole thing is getting delayed,” Fernando told The Associated Press.
“If there are people involved, they want to protect them, I suppose, what else?” Fernando said.
He said the committee, comprising only members of the ruling coalition, was not balanced and its integrity was compromised by the inclusion of people who have other court cases pending against them.
The archbishop of Colombo, Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith, wrote to Rajapaksa earlier this month requesting a copy of the report and later warned that he would approach international church bodies for help if the government does not act on the report promptly.
The president’s office said Monday that the new committee has been given a mandate to identify measures to be taken by various agencies including Parliament, the judiciary, the Attorney General’s Department, security forces and intelligence services in implementing the presidential commission’s recommendations.