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  • Hello.

  • I'm Emma Cott fromThe New York Times.”

  • How are you?”

  • Good. How are you?”

  • Fine.”

  • This is your father's shop?”

  • Yes.”

  • Can we go in?”

  • Yeah. You come here.”

  • Wow.

  • So, what was here before?”

  • And this happened when?”

  • Sunday.

  • The day of the terrorist attack?”

  • Yeah.

  • Between 7:30.”

  • In the evening.”

  • So the terrorist attack happened in the morning —”

  • “— and this happened in the evening.

  • Do you have any idea who was responsible?”

  • Mohamed Ifaz and his father

  • were born and raised in Sri Lanka.

  • They live south of the capital city.

  • Like most of the shopkeepers on this street,

  • they're Muslim, which could explain

  • why their store was torched right

  • after the terrorist attacks, here.

  • We traveled to Negombo, to the site

  • of the deadliest of eight suicide bombings

  • that ripped through this country on Easter morning.

  • People here told us they're now

  • scared to gather, even to grieve.

  • We came to witness a country in mourning,

  • and to see what's being done to prevent

  • that grief from leading to more violence.

  • Sri Lanka has a long history of ethnic tension.

  • Nearly three decades of civil war ended in 2009,

  • but that conflict was between Tamils, who are mostly Hindu,

  • and the Sinhalese majority, who are mostly Buddhist.

  • More recently, Buddhist extremists

  • have attacked Muslims and Christians.

  • And now, there's a growing concern

  • that Sunday's bombings could create a new rift

  • between those two minorities.

  • The police tell us there's a mosque that's

  • sheltering Muslim refugees from Pakistan and Afghanistan,

  • who are fearing for their lives.

  • We heard that some families are living here

  • that have been moved.”

  • Yeah, Pakistan families, yeah.”

  • “O.K., the ones that have been moved since the bombings?”

  • Yeah.”

  • Since Sunday, the cops have been dropping people off here

  • for their own protection.

  • They're sleeping on the floor and there's almost no food,

  • and they have no idea when it will be safe to go back

  • to their homes.

  • Reporter: “What happened to make you come here?”

  • Reporter: “Somebody came to your house with knives and sticks?”

  • Reporter: “People were outside your very house?”

  • Reporter: “And what were they saying?”

  • Only some of the people we talked to say they

  • were actually threatened by mobs,

  • but everyone is sharing stories,

  • and the uneasiness spreads.

  • Reporter: “You said Sri Lankan people were fighting

  • at your house?”

  • Reporter: “And saying what?”

  • You are —”

  • Reporter: “And how was it before the Sunday attacks?”

  • Reporter: “When you heard what?”

  • We decide to head to a police station

  • to see what the cops are doing to defuse tensions.

  • Nice to meet you.

  • Thank you.

  • Thank you for speaking with us.”

  • But as soon as we arrive, an officer

  • interrupts our meeting.

  • Someone has called to report Muslims in the area.

  • We rush out to see how police will respond.

  • By the time we get there, a crowd

  • has gathered outside an apartment.

  • People tell us that the Muslims living there

  • haven't come out for days, which seem suspicious.

  • Reporter: “Is this the family?

  • They're taking them in?”

  • Minutes later, a family appears.

  • This van will take them to the police station where they'll

  • be registered, then to the mosque where they'll

  • join the other refugees.

  • It's not safe for them to stay here anymore.

  • [praying]

  • Back in town, the funerals continue.

  • As soon as one finishes, another begins.

  • No one here is calling for revenge.

  • There is only grief and shock.

  • But a flier is distributed, urging survivors

  • of the bombings not to lash out against their neighbors.

  • The terrorists want to disrupt society

  • by pitting one group against another.

  • More violence would only give them what they want.

Hello.

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