Monday, 7 March 2016

Sri Lanka calls in troops to battle gangs

(iStock)Sri Lanka's president on Sunday announced plans to have the military join a crackdown targeting criminal gangs in the capital as police re-introduced war-time road blocks following a surge in gang-related shootings.

President Maithripala Sirisena told a public meeting in Colombo that he ordered security forces to conduct joint operations with the police to dismantle crime networks responsible for a spate of shootings in Colombo and its suburbs.

"I have instructed the army and the police to jointly take all measures legally possible to crackdown on underworld gangs," Sirisena said. "We can't allow these criminals to disrupt the normal life of the community."

Earlier in the day, the police said more than 100 of their stations in Colombo and suburbs had been asked to erect snap blocks, a common practice during the island's separatist war that ended nearly seven years ago.


Police spokesperson Ruwan Gunasekera said there was a surge in drug smuggling and shootings that prompted the authorities to take extraordinary measures. "The objective is to prevent serious crime and drug smuggling as well as to catch those committing serious crime," he said.

Sri Lankan authorities had dismantled road blocks and stopped vehicle checks after the end of the decades-long Tamil separatist war in May 2009.Even the permanent check points at key entry points to the city had been removed several years ago.

The new government which came to power in January last year removed the last remaining check point at the entrance to the former war zone as a sign of normality. However, the new police measure brought back memories of war-time Colombo when freedom of movement was curtailed due to frequent stops for security checks.

At least 100 000 people were killed in the 37-year war which ended after a major offensive by the military.

Read more on:    sri lanka  |  narcotics

No comments:

Post a Comment