World | cricket Cricket Victims See 'Inside Job' Sri Lankans say security vanished; al-Qaeda may have played role By Jason Farago Posted Mar 6, 2009 6:16 AM CST Copied Players of Pakistan's national hockey team lay flowers to pay tribute to Pakistani police officers who was killed in Tuesday's attack in Lahore, Pakistan on Wednesday, March 4, 2009. (AP Photo/K.M.Chaudary) An unexplained gap in scheduling at this week's cricket match in Lahore has led to angry speculation that the gunmen who attacked the Sri Lankan team may have acted on inside information. While the Pakistani and Sri Lankan teams had traveled together on earlier days, the Pakistani team left later on the day of the ambush. "Maybe they knew the information for the right time," said the Sri Lankan captain. Yesterday the police arrested a number of suspects and found a cache of weapons. Although the government offered no further details, sources tell the Times of London that around two dozen people have been detained—most of whom belong to two outlawed militant groups with close ties to al-Qaeda. Early suspicions had fallen on Lashkar-e-Taiba, the group that masterminded last year's Mumbai attack, but they have never struck inside Pakistan. Read These Next Need a solid 'air hack'? Book your flight on this day. An armed man was shot and killed at Mar-a-Lago. Trump just pulled an endorsement over tariffs. US recaptures hockey gold with OT win over Canada. Report an error