<p>Muslim brothers carried out two of the hotel suicide blasts in Sri Lanka on Easter Sunday, part of a wave of bombings that killed more than 320 people, police sources said on Tuesday.</p>.<p>The sons of a wealthy Colombo spice trader were among suicide bombers who hit three churches and three luxury hotels, investigators told AFP.</p>.<p>An attack on a fourth hotel failed and helped lead police to the Islamist group now blamed for the assault, they added.</p>.<p>The brothers, whose names have not been revealed, were in their late twenties and operated their own "family cell", an investigation officer said.</p>.<p>The pair were key members of the Islamist National Thowheed Jama'ath (NTJ) group which the government has blamed for the attacks, the official added.</p>.<p>The Islamic State group has claimed responsibility for the attacks, but the government has blamed the NTJ.</p>.<p>One brother checked into the Cinnamon Grand hotel and the other the Shangri-La on Saturday.</p>.<p>The next morning, at virtually the same time, they went to the hotels' Easter Sunday breakfast buffets and blew up explosives-laden backpacks, the officer said.</p>.<p>Another bomb tore through a restaurant at the nearby Kingsbury hotel.</p>.<p>Minutes before, similar explosions devastated three churches.</p>.<p>Investigators said it was not known whether the brothers were in contact with the other bombers.</p>.<p>Another would-be suicide bomber walked into a fourth luxury hotel in Colombo on Sunday, official sources told AFP.</p>.<p>"This man had also checked into the hotel the previous day," the source said.</p>.<p>It was not known if his explosives failed or he had a change of heart.</p>.<p>But after the Shangri-la blast, staff at the unnamed hotel became suspicious and the man was tracked to a lodging near the capital. He blew himself up there when confronted by police, the source said. Two bystanders were also killed.</p>.<p>"What we have seen from the CCTV footage is that all the suicide bombers were carrying very heavy backpacks. These appear to be crude devices made locally," the source said.</p>.<p>With 321 people confirmed dead, including at least 39 foreign nationals, and over 500 wounded, Sri Lanka has declared a state of emergency and launched a desperate hunt to head off more attacks.</p>.<p>The whereabouts of the brothers' parents was unknown. But the blasts had a further impact on the family.</p>.<p>One brother gave false identity details when he checked into the hotel, the investigator said. The other gave a real address which led police commandos to their family home in a commercial area of Colombo.</p>.<p>"When the Special Task Force went there to investigate, one brother's wife set off explosives killing herself and her two children," the officer said.</p>.<p>"It was a single terror cell operated by one family," the investigator said.</p>.<p>"They had the cash and the motivation. They operated the cell and it is believed they influenced their extended family."</p>.<p>Three police commandos were killed in the blast, and several extended family members are among those in detention.</p>.<p>The brothers had been involved in their father's lucrative spice export business, investigators said.</p>.<p>A focus of the inquiry will be to find out whether there was a foreign influence in their radicalisation and how the children of such a wealthy family had become involved, an official source said.</p>.<p>"What we have gathered so far is that they had indicated to their close family what they were going to do," another senior police officer said.</p>.<p>"It looks like they were inspired by foreign terrorist groups, but to what extent they had direct links is still unclear."</p>.<p>Sri Lanka police chief Pujith Jayasundara issued an alert on April 11 that the NTJ could launch suicide attacks against churches and other targets.</p>.<p>The whereabouts of the NTJ leader, Zahran Hashmi, is also unknown. He was linked to the vandalising of Buddha statues on December 26 at the central town of Mawanella.</p>.<p>The local Muslim community had been complaining to authorities about Hashmi since 2017.</p>.<p>Residents of the village in the east of the country where he lived had demanded police action against him over his radical comments and acts, community leaders told AFP.</p>.<p>"He was a threat to moderate Muslims in the east and we had made several complaints," one Muslim leader told AFP.</p>.<p>The police chief's warnings about the NTJ were not passed to top ministers. A separate investigation is underway into why more was not done to stop the brothers and the other attackers. </p>
<p>Muslim brothers carried out two of the hotel suicide blasts in Sri Lanka on Easter Sunday, part of a wave of bombings that killed more than 320 people, police sources said on Tuesday.</p>.<p>The sons of a wealthy Colombo spice trader were among suicide bombers who hit three churches and three luxury hotels, investigators told AFP.</p>.<p>An attack on a fourth hotel failed and helped lead police to the Islamist group now blamed for the assault, they added.</p>.<p>The brothers, whose names have not been revealed, were in their late twenties and operated their own "family cell", an investigation officer said.</p>.<p>The pair were key members of the Islamist National Thowheed Jama'ath (NTJ) group which the government has blamed for the attacks, the official added.</p>.<p>The Islamic State group has claimed responsibility for the attacks, but the government has blamed the NTJ.</p>.<p>One brother checked into the Cinnamon Grand hotel and the other the Shangri-La on Saturday.</p>.<p>The next morning, at virtually the same time, they went to the hotels' Easter Sunday breakfast buffets and blew up explosives-laden backpacks, the officer said.</p>.<p>Another bomb tore through a restaurant at the nearby Kingsbury hotel.</p>.<p>Minutes before, similar explosions devastated three churches.</p>.<p>Investigators said it was not known whether the brothers were in contact with the other bombers.</p>.<p>Another would-be suicide bomber walked into a fourth luxury hotel in Colombo on Sunday, official sources told AFP.</p>.<p>"This man had also checked into the hotel the previous day," the source said.</p>.<p>It was not known if his explosives failed or he had a change of heart.</p>.<p>But after the Shangri-la blast, staff at the unnamed hotel became suspicious and the man was tracked to a lodging near the capital. He blew himself up there when confronted by police, the source said. Two bystanders were also killed.</p>.<p>"What we have seen from the CCTV footage is that all the suicide bombers were carrying very heavy backpacks. These appear to be crude devices made locally," the source said.</p>.<p>With 321 people confirmed dead, including at least 39 foreign nationals, and over 500 wounded, Sri Lanka has declared a state of emergency and launched a desperate hunt to head off more attacks.</p>.<p>The whereabouts of the brothers' parents was unknown. But the blasts had a further impact on the family.</p>.<p>One brother gave false identity details when he checked into the hotel, the investigator said. The other gave a real address which led police commandos to their family home in a commercial area of Colombo.</p>.<p>"When the Special Task Force went there to investigate, one brother's wife set off explosives killing herself and her two children," the officer said.</p>.<p>"It was a single terror cell operated by one family," the investigator said.</p>.<p>"They had the cash and the motivation. They operated the cell and it is believed they influenced their extended family."</p>.<p>Three police commandos were killed in the blast, and several extended family members are among those in detention.</p>.<p>The brothers had been involved in their father's lucrative spice export business, investigators said.</p>.<p>A focus of the inquiry will be to find out whether there was a foreign influence in their radicalisation and how the children of such a wealthy family had become involved, an official source said.</p>.<p>"What we have gathered so far is that they had indicated to their close family what they were going to do," another senior police officer said.</p>.<p>"It looks like they were inspired by foreign terrorist groups, but to what extent they had direct links is still unclear."</p>.<p>Sri Lanka police chief Pujith Jayasundara issued an alert on April 11 that the NTJ could launch suicide attacks against churches and other targets.</p>.<p>The whereabouts of the NTJ leader, Zahran Hashmi, is also unknown. He was linked to the vandalising of Buddha statues on December 26 at the central town of Mawanella.</p>.<p>The local Muslim community had been complaining to authorities about Hashmi since 2017.</p>.<p>Residents of the village in the east of the country where he lived had demanded police action against him over his radical comments and acts, community leaders told AFP.</p>.<p>"He was a threat to moderate Muslims in the east and we had made several complaints," one Muslim leader told AFP.</p>.<p>The police chief's warnings about the NTJ were not passed to top ministers. A separate investigation is underway into why more was not done to stop the brothers and the other attackers. </p>