Sri Lankan police appealed for information Saturday to track down
four gunmen who opened fire at a ruling party rally in the capital,
killing a woman and wounding 12 other people.
Several teams of detective were assembled Saturday, a day after the
daring attack on Finance Minister Ravi Karunanayake’s campaign rally for
the August 17 parliamentary elections, police spokesman Ruwan
Gunasekera said.
The minister who escaped unhurt accused the opposition United
People’s Freedom Alliance (UPFA) of carrying out the attack, a charge
denied by the party.
“We are investigating the motive for the attack,” the police
spokesman said adding that no arrests had been made 24 hours after the
attack in a commercial area of the capital.
Friday’s shooting was the worst attack against a campaign rally in the run up to this month’s election.
The 52-year-old finance minister is one of the most senior members of
the UNP, which backed former president Mahinda Rajapakse’s successor
Maithripala Sirisena in January’s presidential election.
He had initiated several investigations into alleged fraud by members of the Rajapakse regime.
But Rajapakse’s UPFA denied any involvement, alleging an “internal clash” within the ruling party.
This year’s campaign had been largely peaceful and local election monitors expressed surprise at Friday’s shooting.
Almost all previous elections have been marred by allegations that
government workers colluded with the ruling party to give them an undue
advantage.
Ahead of January’s presidential poll, election chief Mahinda
Deshapriya had ordered police to shoot anyone trying to disrupt the
vote.
The presidential election passed off relatively peacefully, although one Sirisena supporter was killed in a drive-by shooting.
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