Colombo: Former Sri Lankan President Maithripala Sirisena has said that failure to brief him on an intelligence report led to the coordinated 2019 Easter Sunday attacks, adding that all preventive measures would be in place had he been informed.
He made the remarks on Monday before the Presidential Commission of Inquiry (PCoI), which is probing the terror carnage, the Daily Financial Times newspaper reported.
"If I had been briefed of these intelligence reports, I would have called off my overseas trip and taken all measures to prevent such heinous attacks from taking place. This calamity could have been averted if those entrusted with the responsibility of following up on intelligence reports had done their job diligently," Sirisena told the COI during nearly six hours of questioning by the Attorney General's representative to the Commission Additional Solicitor General Ayesha Jinasena P.C.
The COI was appointed on September 20, 2019, by Sirisena when he was in office, Its term has been extended till December 20 this year by incumbent President Gotabaya Rajapaksa.
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Sirisena further said that he had left the country on April 16, 2019, for Singapore with a stopover at Tirupati, India, noting that it was during his absence the unfortunate incidents took place and that he had been kept in the dark on the serious threat facing the country.
He said before the trip, he had held meetings with then IGP Pujith Jayasundera, former Defence Secretary Hemasiri Fernando, chief of the State Intelligence Service (SIS) and other and senior police officers.
"At none of these meetings was I told of the foreign intelligence report received on 4 April with a specific threat of terrorist attacks," the Daily Financial Times newspaper quoted the former leader as saying.
Had he been aware of the intelligence report, "I would have focused all attention on dealing with such a threat".