An extremist leader at the heart of Sri Lanka’s Easter suicide bombings died in the attacks, the country’s president said yesterday, as security forces guarded mosques for weekly prayers amid fears of reprisal strikes.
Security forces stepped up their searches for Islamists and raided a studio used by them to record a video pledge to Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi before carrying out the deadly Easter attacks.
During a separate search, security forces and military came under fire however there were no reports of injuries, police said.
“We have found the backdrop the group used to record their video,” the police said in a 
statement.
The IS had released the video two days after the attack.
Police showed the clothing and the flag on national television, as well as some 150 sticks of dynamite and about 100,000 ball bearings seized from the house.
The discovery in the town of Sammanthurai, 370km (231 miles) east of Colombo, came as police and security forces continued search operations for Islamic extremists responsible for the Easter bombings.
There were also reports of minor explosions at another location in the same area but officials said there were no immediate reports of casualties.
At least 253 people were killed and hundreds more injured when suicide bombers struck three churches and three luxury hotels in the island nation.
President Maithripala Sirisena told reporters that Zahran Hashim, head of a local extremist group, was killed at one of the Colombo hotels targeted.
“What intelligence agencies have told me is that Zahran was killed during the Shangri-La 
attack,” he said.
Hashim was accompanied by a second bomber identified as 
Ilham Ibrahim, Sirisena said.
Authorities had been desperately searching for Hashim after naming his group, National Thowheeth Jama’ath (NTJ), as the perpetrators of the attack.
DNA tests are being done on a severed head to conclusively establish that it is of Hashim’s, officials said, adding they believe the tests will prove positive.
Hashim, who founded the NTJ, appeared in a video released by the Islamic State group when it claimed the strikes. He is seen leading seven others in a pledge of allegiance to Baghdadi.
The government is on the defensive over its failure to heed a foreign intelligence warning that NTJ was planning suicide 
bombings on churches.
Police chief Pujith Jayasundara became the second major official to resign over the blunders, after top defence ministry official Hemasiri Fernando stepped down late Thursday.
Sri Lanka’s Catholic leader, Cardinal Malcolm Ranjith, the archbishop of Colombo, said he felt “betrayed” by the government’s failure to act on the 
warnings.
Late yesterday, Sri Lankan Prime Minister Ranil Wickremesinghe apologised.
“We take collective responsibility and apologise to our fellow citizens for our failure to protect victims of these tragic events,” Wickremesinghe wrote on 
Twitter.
The military have poured troops onto the streets to back up police as they search for suspects using newly granted powers 
under a state of emergency.
At least 74 people are in custody, including a man believed to be the father of two of the bombers.
“We now have info that there are about 140 people in Sri Lanka linked to the Islamic State. We can and we will eradicate all of them very soon,” Sirisena said, announcing that there would also be new legislation to ban 
extremist groups.
Security was especially tight for weekly prayers in mosques, where attendance fell 
dramatically.
Armed police with sniffer dogs checked everyone entering major mosques.
Dozens of foreigners died in the attacks and the government said yesterday it expected the number of overseas tourists to fall by 30% this year, at a cost 
of $1.5bn in revenues.
Finance Minister Mangala Samaraweera said the country – which depends on tourism as a cornerstone of its economy – could take up to two years to fully recover.
Several countries including Israel, Australia and Britain have warned their citizens against visiting Sri Lanka in the wake of the attacks.
Authorities reduced the death toll from 360 dead to 253, saying badly mutilated bodies were double counted.
Health ministry director general Anil Jasinghe said the “very complex nature of the human remains” had made it hard for forensic experts to compile an accurate toll while carrying out their “grim task”.
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