Relatives weep near the coffin with the remains of 12-year...

Relatives weep near the coffin with the remains of 12-year Sneha Savindi, who was a victim of Easter Sunday bombing at St. Sebastian Church on April 22, 2019 in Negombo, Sri Lanka. Credit: AP/Gemunu Amarasinghe

We mourn with the citizens of Sri Lanka, appalled by the wanton bloodshed of Easter’s suicide attacks. At least 290 people were killed, four of them Americans, and 500 injured. And a nation still recovering from a horrific 26-year civil war that only ended in 2009 was plunged back into an era marked by fear, uncertainty and suspicion.

But the tragedy that rocked the South Asian island also resonated in America for the way it evokes our own struggle with broad themes like national security, multiculturalism, and technology.

Sri Lankan security forces apparently failed to heed detailed warnings about the alleged plotters, a small radical Islamist group that might have been inspired by the Islamic State to commit one of the worst terrorist attacks since 9/11.

The tensions there have been rooted in Sri Lanka’s multiculturalism; the nation is mostly Buddhist, with smaller numbers of Hindus, Muslims and Catholics — a stark lesson in the consequences of intolerance.

After the attacks, the government shut down social media to stop the spread of misinformation and reduce the danger of more violence. But social media can be used to combat disinformation and rumors, and it allows people to contact loved ones. And such information blackouts can morph into tools of authoritarianism. Last year in Sri Lanka, rumors on Facebook’s newsfeed played a key role in escalating tensions that led to Buddhist mob assaults on Muslims. Falsehoods on social media have been instrumental in ethnic violence elsewhere, too.

The Easter bombings raise difficult questions about technology’s role in inflaming tensions. We also have experienced that in the United States, though not to the tragic degree seen in Sri Lanka.

We empathize with its citizens in their time of grief, and we must learn from their loss, while being thoughtful about our own challenges.  — The editorial board

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