The Sri Lankan government admitted that it failed to act on multiple warnings before a coordinated series of attacks ripped through churches and hotels on Easter Sunday, adding that an international terror group might be to blame.
A government spokesman Rajitha Senaratne revealed that warnings were received in the days before the attacks, which killed 290 people and injured at least 500 more, including from foreign intelligence services.
He said one of the warnings referred to National Tawheed Jamath, or NTJ, a little-known local Islamist group that defaced Buddhist statues in the past.
But MR Senaratne, who is also health minister, said he did not believe a local group could have acted alone.
"There must be a wider international network behind it," he said.
No group has yet claimed responsibility.
The United States believes it has identified a key terrorist operative in the attacks, and has initially concluded that the person has connections to international terrorism organisations, including ISIS, two US officials directly familiar with the initial US intelligence assessment said.
These connections are a key reason the US has come to an early conclusion the attacks were inspired by ISIS, according to one of the two officials.
For now, the US is trying to figure out just how involved ISIS may have been in facilitating the attacks, the official said.
SRI LANKAN GOVERNMENT APOLOGISES
Police arrested 24 people in connection with Sunday's attacks, the worst violence the South Asian island has seen since its bloody civil war ended 10 years ago.
Six suicide bombers were involved, Sri Lanka military spokesman Sumith Atapattu said.
Nine of the 24 suspects have been remanded until May 6 by a Colombo magistrate, state media reported.
The security situation remained fluid yesterday.
Police found 87 detonators in a private terminal of the main bus station in Sri Lanka's capital, Colombo, and a controlled explosion was carried out on a van near St Anthony's church, one of three churches targeted in the attack.
On Sunday evening, an improvised explosive device was defused near the capital's Bandaranaike International Airport.
A dusk-'til-dawn curfew was imposed for the second night in a row. Sri Lankan authorities declared a state of emergency from midnight Monday, and said today would be a national day of mourning.
Intelligence failures would be investigated, Mr Senaratne said.
"We saw the warnings and we saw the details given," he told reporters. "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."
Families would be compensated and churches rebuilt, he said.
THE POLITICAL SITUATION IN SRI LANKA
The blasts appears to have targeted tourism hotspots, as well as churches, in an effort to gain maximum global attention.
Most of the dead and injured were Sri Lankan. At least 31 tourists were killed in the attacks, according to a statement released last night from Sri Lanka's Ministry of Foreign Affairs, which revised down the Sri Lankan tourism minister's previous estimate of 39 people.
The attacks occurred in a period of political instability in Sri Lanka.
In October, the Sri Lankan President attempted to depose the prime minister and replace him with a favored successor. That move backfired and Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe was reinstated in December.
President Maithripala Sirisena was out of the country at the time of Sunday's attacks.
Mr Wickremesinghe said warnings about a potential attack had not been shared with him or other government ministers. Sajith Premadasa, minister of housing construction and cultural affairs, said security officers were guilty of "negligence and incompetence."
Speaking to CNN's Christiane Amanpour yesterday, Sri Lankan Minister of Economic Reforms and Public Distribution Harsha de Silva said US and Indian intelligence agencies had warned the Sri Lankan government of imminent attacks.
De Silva said the Sri Lankan government "did receive information from overseas that something terrible was to happen" but "the Prime Minister was unaware" and "was kept in the dark."
The minister - an ally of Mr Wickremesinghe - argued that "it wasn't a failure of the intelligence apparatus" but "a failure of implementing" an appropriate response.
It is unclear whether the details contained in the warning matched the atrocity that eventually took place on Sunday.
It is not clear why Christians were targeted: Christianity is a minority religion in Sri Lanka, accounting for 7.4 per cent of the total population of 21.4 million. According to census data, 70.2 per cent of Sri Lankans identify as Buddhist, 12 per cent Hindu and 9.7 per cent Muslim.
In recent years, Sri Lanka has boomed as a holiday destination, welcoming 2.2 million visitors in 2017 compared to just over 1 million in 2012, providing tourists with an affordable alternative to tropical destinations such as the Maldives.
Yesterday morning, however, the city's beachfront hotel district, where several of the bombs struck, was heavily guarded by soldiers carrying AK-47s and bomb-sniffing dogs were at closed hotel gates where guests were being checked in.
The Australian government advised citizens to reconsider their need to travel to Sri Lanka.
RISE OF ISIS IN ASIA
Premadasa, the Sri Lankann health minister, called Sunday's attacks a "brand-new type of terrorism" that had rocked the nation. "We have not had any separatist movements in the past 10 years and this came as a shock to all of us," he said.
The civil war between the separatist Tamil Tigers and the Sri Lankan government ended in 2009, after claiming between 70,000 and 80,000 lives. Handling that conflict, Mr Premadasa said, had prepared the government to deal with terrorism.
"During the 30-year terrorist war there were indiscriminate attacks on all institutions, they (the Tamil Tigers) did not spare any in their path towards a separatist state, but we were victorious in defeating terrorism," he added.
The targets of the attacks - churches and hotels catering to foreigners - have figured in previous bombings in Asia and beyond in recent years.
In January 2019, ISIS claimed responsibility for an attack that killed at least 20 in a church in the Philippines. The attack also took place on a Sunday, when worshippers were gathered for mass.
In May 2018, ISIS claimed responsibility for attacks at three churches in Indonesia, which killed at least 12 people and injured dozens more. On Palm Sunday in 2017, ISIS killed at least 49 people gathered for Mass at two churches in Egypt.
After the collapse of the ISIS caliphate in Iraq and Syria, as many as 5600 foreign fighters have returned to their home countries since October 2017.