Amrozi bin Nurhasyim | Amrozi bin Nurhasyim | Jemaah Islamiah | Southeast Asia | 20030806 | ||||
Amrozi bin Nurhasyim | Jemaah Islamiyah | Southeast Asia | 20031205 |
Southeast Asia |
Bali bombers may testify against Hambali |
2009-03-10 |
Two convicted members of the Jemaah Islamiyah terrorist network said on Monday that they were ready to testify in court against Indonesian-born Al Qaeda terrorist suspect Riduan Hambali Isamuddin if he was returned to Indonesian custody after the United States closed its Guantanamo Bay detention facility in Cuba. In an exclusive jailhouse interview, Ali Imron and Mubarok, both serving life sentences for their roles in the 2000 Christmas Eve and 2002 Bali bombings, told the Jakarta Globe that Hambali had financed and organized the simultaneous bombings of Christian churches and homes in six provinces, killing 18 people. Hambalis role in the Christmas Eve terror was to trigger our desire to wage jihad against nonbelievers, Imron said from his jail cell at the Jakarta Regional Police headquarters. He was the mastermind of the church bombings, he said. Imron, who escaped a firing squad last year by expressing remorse for his actions, and Mubarok are cooperating with National Police investigators, who are preparing a dossier of charges against Hambali in the hopes that he will be returned to Indonesia after Guantanamo Bay is closed. However, in a clear disagreement, senior government officials have been reported to have privately asked the United States to continue detaining Hambali, citing widespread consensus within the security, military and law enforcement communities that his return home would be an unwanted distraction and could rejuvenate his terrorist network, popularly known as JI. In addition, a senior national security official said there may not be enough evidence to convict Hambali of any domestic terrorist activities in an Indonesian court. Imron and Mubarok told the Jakarta Globe that they had met Hambali and Amrozi bin Nurhasyim, who was executed in November for his role in the first Bali bombings, in a hotel in Surabaya, East Java Province, just a few weeks before the Dec. 24, 2000, bombings. They said Hambali outlined what would be extremely well-coordinated attacks on targets in 11 cities, saying: Its the proper time to take revenge by bombing churches. Me, Amrozi and Mubarok spent the night in Hambalis hotel room and early in the morning we, including Hambali, went to Mojokerto to survey churches, Mubarok said, referring to the city located 50 kilometers from Surabaya. He said bombs were later planted at the Eben Haezer, Santo Yoesoef and Allah Baik churches in Mojokerto, which killed two people and wounded six others. Mubarok said Hambali left Surabaya before the attacks were carried out and may have been in Malaysia when the bombs went off. However, Imron and Mubarok said they had no information about whether Hambali was involved in the 2002 Bali bombings, despite claims by US intelligence officials that he, as JIs operations chief, had masterminded them. I think he didnt know anything about planning and carrying out the Bali bombings, Mubarok said. Government and private terrorism analysts have said the best case for prosecuting Hambali here would be for murder charges over the Christmas Eve bombings, which occurred in the North Sumatra provincial capital of Medan, and the provinces of Batam, Riau, West Java, Jakarta, East Java and West Nusa Tenggara. They said the case would rest on testimony from Imron and Mubarok, because Hambali couldnt be prosecuted retroactively under the 2002 terrorism law, and no forensic evidence linked him to other plots. |
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Down Under |
Bali bombers call on militia boss Eurico Guterres to testify |
2008-09-11 |
* Bombers want proof death by firing squad hurts * Attempting to delay their executions * They argue they should die 'humanely' LAWYERS for the three death-row Bali bombers will call former East Timor militia leader Eurico Guterres to testify that death by firing squad would constitute torture. Amrozi bin Nurhasyim, Ali Ghufron, also known as Mukhlas, and Imam Samudra are expected to be put to death some time after Idul Fitri, the early-October conclusion to the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, The Australian reports. But they are trying to delay their deaths with a constitutional court appeal that argues they should be allowed to die by beheading, lethal injection or some other, more humane means. The trio was responsible for the 2002 Bali nightclub bombings in which 202 people, including 88 Australians, were killed. They want Guterres, the only person to have been convicted over the 1999 Indonesian-led rampage in East Timor in which thousands died, to describe how painful various shooting deaths he witnessed were. "We want him to demonstrate that being shot dead constitutes torture, because he's been to war and he's seen that people who are shot do not die straight away," lawyer Wirawan Adnan said. Guterres was released from jail last year when his conviction for crimes against humanity, based on his leadership of pro-Indonesian militias in East Timor, was overturned. The bombers' lawyers are arguing that even though members of a firing squad aim directly at the condemned person's heart, there can still be a delay before they are dead. |
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Southeast Asia |
Bali bombers seek beheading instead of firing squad |
2008-08-20 |
![]() "Too bad. We're gonna shoot youse. Whaddya want for yer last meal?" "Strawberries!" Strawberries ain't in season!" "We'll wait!" The Indonesian government wants to put the three men in front of a firing squad before the Muslim holy month of Ramadan, which begins next month. But their lawyers insist that would be inhumane. The three bombers say they prefer to be beheaded, according to local reports. Their lawyers have suggested lethal injection. "Or we could just OD 'em on reds. That'd be kinda peaceful..." "After the strawberries, of course." Indonesia's Constitutional Court has agreed to hear a petition from Amrozi bin Nurhasyim, Imam Samudra and Ali Gufron, who were convicted for the backpack and van bomb attacks on Bali nightclubs. Imam Samudra was convicted as a lead organizer and Gufron of masterminding the attacks. In the court filing, lawyers from a group called the Muslim Defenders Team insisted that the bombers had "a constitutional right not to be tortured," and maintained that any delay between being shot and dying would amount to torture. The Muslim Defenders Team would be the Muslim Defenders League, which is another organization set up by Abu Bakr Bashir, who was found not guilty of being head of Jemaah Islamiyah. As an example, they offered the March 10 execution of Muhammad Tubagus Yusuf Maulana, a shaman who duped villagers out of thousands of dollars by convincing them they would reap riches by paying him. He poisoned eight people and buried their bodies. Maulana died 10 minutes after being shot by a firing squad, even though one member is armed with a pistol to dispatch, with a point-blank shot to the head, anyone who survives the volley aimed at the heart. "This means that the law admits that the prisoner [might] still be alive after he has already been shot, and certainly blood will be all over him, so that he will undergo a very deep torture before he finally dies by the final shot," the petition said. Atty. Gen. Hendarman Supandji has said he wants the executions carried out before Ramadan, expected to begin Sept. 1, but the court's ruling isn't expected before then. Comes as a surprise, dunnit? The bombers' legal team conceded that the attorney general has the authority to carry out the executions without waiting for the court's ruling, but argued that such action would disrespect the constitution. In anticipation of an execution order, authorities have tightened security around Nusakambangan Island, where the men are imprisoned. Samudra warned this year that Al Qaeda was "very likely" to retaliate if the bombers are executed, and some terrorism experts and Indonesian commentators maintain that using a firing squad could have the effect of making them martyrs. |
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Southeast Asia |
Court considers execution delay for Bali bombers |
2008-08-15 |
![]() Lawyers for Amrozi bin Nurhasyim, Ali Gufron and Imam Samudra told the Constitutional Court on Thursday that death by firing squad can be tortuously slow and painful and therefore unconstitutional. The court also agreed to consider an application that the bombers executions be delayed. Lawyer Wirawan Adnan said that while the Constitutional Court did not have the power to order a stay of execution, it would be respectful for the government to do that. "It's up to them whether or not to do it, but, you know, I believe they should respect this court and respect the constitution," he said. Indonesia's constitutional court opened hearings into the Islamists' latest bid to stave off their executions by firing squad over the 2002 attacks (photo) on the resort island of Bali which killed 202 people, mainly foreign tourists. The Indonesian attorney general's office has said it hopes to execute the Islamist militants, who were convicted in 2003, before the Muslim holy month of Ramadan begins in early September. |
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Terror Networks |
Death-row Bali bombers forgo presidential pardon |
2008-07-21 |
![]() Nope. They deserve only the finest hemp ... Bali, 21 July (AKI) - The three Islamist militants convicted of the deadly 2002 Bali bombing have waived their right to seek a presidential pardon, Indonesia's Attorney-General has confirmed. General Hendarman Supanji said he hoped the three men would be executed before the Muslim holy month of Ramadan begins in early September. Or maybe the next one. Or the one after that... Supanji said the three - Amrozi bin Nurhasyim, his brother Mukhlas and Imam Samudra - have all waived their right to seek Presidential clemency. "We have offered it in writing to them and to their families and both have refused it," he said. He said that all legal avenues have been exhausted and their is nothing to stop the men's executions from going ahead. Indonesia does not make public the timing and exact location of executions. Under Indonesian law, executions are by firing squad and can take place at any time once all legal appeals are over. The men are being held in a maximum-security jail on Nusakambangan island off central Java. When's the mysterious jailbreak? The men's family members - who live hundreds of miles away in east and west Java - are expected to receive 72 hours notice before the condemned men face a firing squad. Indonesian police say they have prepared a firing squad for the execution. Indonesia's Supreme Court last week dismissed the final appeal by Amrozi, his brother Mukhlas and Samudra. The three were convicted of planning and carrying out the nightclub bombings which was the worst act of terrorism ever seen in Indonesia. The attacks killed 202 people, most of them foreign tourists, and injured another 209 people. So long, smiley boy... |
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Southeast Asia | |||
Radical Cleric Says Acquittal Is A "Blow To The West" | |||
2006-12-22 | |||
![]() The "truth", of course, being conveyed by vehicles ladened with Semtex and fanatical jihadis. Bali Thursday's ruling - which also ordered authorities to "rehabilitate" the 69-year-old cleric's reputation - is largely symbolic, as Bashir was Jakarta's Cipinang Penitentiary on 14 June after completing 26 months of a 30-month jail sentence for being part of a conspiracy behind the nightclub bombings. Does that include an Australian ad campaign? A panel of judges at the Supreme Court unanimously ruled that the white-bearded, bespectacled Muslim cleric was not involved in the 2002 bomb attacks on Bali that killed 202 people, mostly Western tourists. Presiding judge German Hoediarto said the verdict was handed down after investigating the testimony from 30 witnesses. "They all said Bashir was not involved in the case," Hoediarto told the Detikcom news portal. Thirty witnesses conveyed the "truth"!
Everything's goin' smooth as clockwork.
"And we're five minutes ahead of schedule, too."
Translation: "Weak" Muslims, it is time to carefully consider your future prospects. We won and the government is going to subsidize our future ... endeavors. Choose wisely. Police antiterror investigators said bin Nurhasyim and his accomplice Mubarok had met with Bashir before the Bali bombings and that the cleric had given them permission to launch an attack in Bali. The two Bashir has been accused by Australia and the United States of being the spiritual leader of the regional Jamaah Islamiyah terror network blamed for the Bali attacks and a series of other blasts in Indonesia. Bashir has consistently denied any connection to that or other attacks blamed on the southeast Asian militant group, Jamaah Islamiyah (JI) whose objective is the creation of an Islamic 'caliphate' in the region. | |||
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Southeast Asia | ||
Jail Guard Quizzed Over Bali Terror Laptop Link | ||
2006-08-28 | ||
Jakarta, 28 August (AKI/Jakarta Post) - Indonesian police are questioning a prison guard accused of helping convicted Bali bomber Imam Samudra obtain a laptop inside his cell, which he may have used to plan the second Bali bombings. The suspect, identified as Beni, was working at Bali's Kerobokan Penitentiary when Imam was imprisoned there for his role in the first bombings on the resort island in 2002. Beni was detained last week while on duty at Puwokerto Penitentiary in Central Java. He is alleged to have received a laptop from Agung Setiadi, who was recently detained on allegations of abetting terrorism through the Internet, and then passed the computer on to Imam on death row. While police are confident that Beni provided the laptop to Imam, they say they are unsure about his motive. "We are still questioning the guard to try and find out his possible role in the terrorist bombing," National Police spokesperson Brig. Gen. Anton Bachrul Alam told The Jakarta Post.
Imam's lawyer Mahendradatta said his client denied any involvement in the second Bali bombings in 2005. "He said he never communicated with people outside of the prison over the Internet, nor did he possess a laptop. He would be pleased, of course, if he had one because he could write books using it," the lawyer said as quoted by detik.com news portal. Mahendradatta claimed authorities were fabricating links between his client and the second Bali bombings to thwart Imam's plan to file a final appeal of his conviction with the Supreme Court. Imam and two others sentenced to death over the first Bali bombings, Amrozi bin Nurhasyim and Ali Ghufron, alias Mukhlas, have said they will filed appeals with the Supreme Court. The government delayed the executions of the three which had been scheduled for Aug. 22 to give the court time to hear the appeals. Imam, Amrozi and Mukhlas are currently being held on the island prison of Nusa Kambangan in Cilacap, Central Java. "This case has been fabricated to create an image that my client is dangerous and that he doesn't deserve forgiveness," Mahendradatta said.
Mahendradatta said Imam had been pressured to give testimony accusing Abu Bakar Ba'asyir of taking part in the bombing of the J.W. Marriott Hotel in South Jakarta. But Imam later testified in favor of Ba'asyir during his trial session, he said. | ||
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Southeast Asia | |
Bali bombers' executions stayed | |
2006-08-21 | |
SMILING assassin Amrozi and two other Bali bombers who were due to be executed tomorrow morning have been given a last-minute stay on their death sentences. Amrozi bin Nurhasyim, Imam Samudra and Ali Gufron reportedly want to file a final appeal. "We have to respect the rights of the convicts because they have informed us that they want to file a final appeal," said the Indonesian attorney-general's spokesman I Wayan Pasek Suarta. "The execution cannot be carried out."
The men were scehduled to face a firing squad at dawn tomorrow. The twin bombings killed 202 people on 12 October 2002, 88 of them Australian. The three have expressed in the past their willingness to die as martyrs. Their death sentences have been caught up in debate about the fate of three Indonesian Christians, scheduled to be executed over the weekend for their part in riots that saw 200 mainly Muslim people killed in 2000. Two Indonesian Government sources, contradicting the official government line, have said that it would be politically difficult for the Bali bombers to be executed if the Christians were not put to death first. The Bali three are being held in the island jail of Nusakambangan, off Java's south coast. Last week, others convicted as accomplices in the attacks were granted reductions in their sentences as part of an annual custom. | |
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Southeast Asia |
Bali bombers death date set |
2006-07-10 |
![]() THE three Bali bombers on death row will be executed by firing squad at the end of the month, according to the Denpasar prosecutors office. Burn in Allahs hell Lawyers for Imam Samudra, 36, Amrozi bin Nurhasyim, 43, and Ali Ghufron, alias Mukhlas, 46, had not lodged expected appeal documents, clearing the way for execution within weeks. Bali's Denpost newspaper today quoted officials as saying time had run out for the men convicted over the 2002 truck bomb blasts at the Sari Club and Paddy's Bar that killed 202 people, including 88 Australians. The reported execution timetable could not be immediately confirmed by AAP today. "We waited, but they have not been lodged," the paper quoted an unidentified official in the prosecutor's office as saying about the three men's appeals. "It seems that by the end of July to be exact July 30 the execution will be done. "We are just awaiting the orders of the attorney-general's office." Lawyers for the three had promised to lodge appeals in May, basing their applications on the fact that anti-terrorism laws used to convict them were brought into force after the attacks. In 2003 Indonesia's constitutional court ruled the use of retroactive legislation was illegal. Indonesian Attorney-General Abdul Rahman Saleh has ruled the three, who have refused asking for presidential clemency, will be executed on the remote prison island of Nusakambangan off southern Java, dubbed "Indonesia's Alcatraz". A spokesman for the Attorney-General refused to confirm the execution timetable, saying only that preparations for the firing squad have begun. "What is clear is that it will be Nusakambangan, but we don't know the exact place yet," he told AAP. Denpasar prosecutor Wayan Suwila also refused to confirm July 30 for the executions and said authorities might be trying to pressure lawyers to lodge their requests for Supreme Court judicial review, thereby halting the process as the appeals are considered. "The impact of saying things like that would be too vast," he said. "Maybe, just maybe, this is a tactic to provoke the lawyers." The three bombers were moved to Nusakambangan last October on security grounds after Balinese incensed by triple suicide bombings rioted outside their Denpasar prison and demanded their immediate execution. Balinese community leaders have demanded the trio be executed on the island where they committed their crimes. Executions in Indonesia are carried out at dawn by hand-picked paramilitary police at a secret location, usually a patch of forest or a beach. Meanwhile, the radical cleric jailed and later released for giving his blessings to the Bali bombings, Abu Bakar Bashir, is reportedly planning to join one of Indonesia's largest Islamic political parties. The conservative Partai Persatuan Pembangunan (United Development Party) of former vice president Hamzah Haz has invited Bashir to become a member, the Indo Pos newspaper reported, "The PPP is a party based on Islam, which is the same path followed by Ustadz (honoured teacher) Abu Bakar Bashir," the party's central Java branch head KH Thoyfoer said. Bashir was released from jail on June 14 after serving a total of four years, including a sentence for involvement in the first Bali bombings. |
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Southeast Asia |
Bali bombers trio to appeal convictions |
2006-07-05 |
![]() Imam Samudra, 36, Amrozi bin Nurhasyim, 43, and Ali Ghufron, alias Mukhlas, 46, have already said they do not want a presidential pardon for their crimes. But Mr Adnan said the planned application for a judicial review had "no connection" with their guilt or otherwise. "Even criminals deserve justice. So they must be tried under the criminal code, not under the anti-terrorism legislation," Mr Adnan said. "We have already received the power of attorney from our clients to lodge the review. They themselves (the bombers) have requested this. If the review is accepted, there will be a new verdict in a new case." |
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Southeast Asia |
Indonesian police follow Bali school tip |
2005-10-06 |
Indonesian police say they are pursuing a tip from a caller who claimed that one of the Bali bombers studied in an area famous for its hardline Islamic schools. The possible lead was one of the few announced by police since they began circulating nationwide photographs of the three bombers' bruised severed heads, recovered from the weekend attacks on the crowded restaurants in the resort island. The blasts Saturday killed 22 and injured 104. The tipster called police in Solo, a city on the main island of Java, and said one of the bombers had studied in the area, home to a hardline Islamic boarding school attended by several militants convicted in previous terror attacks, Solo's police chief commissioner Abdul Madjid said Wednesday. "He identified one of the bombers," said Madjid, adding that the caller claimed the man's name was "Gareng." Madjid provided no further information and said authorities were pursuing the lead. Investigators across the country were interrogating jailed terror convicts, seeking information about the bombers, Bali police chief Maj. Gen. I Made Mangku Pastika said. "So far the detained terrorists do not know them," Pastika said. Those questioned included Amrozi bin Nurhasyim and Imam Samudra, sentenced to death for their roles in the 2002 Bali bombings that killed 202 people. Meanwhile, the recent bombings have triggered new calls for Washington to give Indonesian investigators access to detained Southeast Asian terror mastermind Hambali -- a Muslim cleric once dubbed Osama bin Laden's point man in Southeast Asia. Washington's refusal, a long-standing irritant between the two nations, comes as the United States tries to boost anti-terror cooperation with Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim nation. "I think the time has now come for the United States to give full access to the Indonesian police so they can interrogate Hambali," said Theo Sambuaga, chairman of Parliament's political and security commission. However, U.S. State Department press officer Tom Casey said Wednesday that the United States had shared with Indonesia information they had received from Hambali. "We believe those responsible for terrorist acts in Indonesia should be brought to justice, and we are committed to cooperate to that end," Casey said. The United States says giving Indonesian investigators access to Hambali, also known as Riduan Isamuddin, could compromise their own investigation of him, reportedly involving alleged links to two of the September 11 hijackers and a plan to recruit new pilots for another wave of suicide hijackings in the United States. Hambali, a 41-year-old Indonesian citizen, is also accused of being Jemaah Islamiya's operations chief. Thai forces and the CIA captured him two years ago in the ancient Thai temple city of Ayutthaya. He was handed over to U.S. authorities and flown to an undisclosed location for interrogation. Asked about access, the U.S. Embassy in Jakarta on Tuesday reissued a statement from last year saying it "was committed to allow the Indonesian government to bring Hambali to justice for terrorist attacks perpetrated in Indonesia by Jemaah Islamiyah at the appropriate time. However, we have set no timetable for such a turnover." On Wednesday, Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono called on his military to stamp out the scourge of terrorism, saying the bombings "have spoiled Indonesia's reputation in the eyes of the world." Saturday's attacks have put Southeast Asian nations on high alert to prevent more bombings. Hundreds of thousands of troops were on standby, while security was tightened on beaches and along borders. Bomb disposal squads and hazardous materials experts were rushed to the U.S., British, Australian, French and Russian embassies in Malaysia on Wednesday after receiving packages threatening retaliation for perceived injustices against the Muslim world, police said. The parcels were later dismissed as a hoax, as were similar envelopes sent to six other diplomatic missions a day earlier, said Abdul Aziz Bulat, the chief of Kuala Lumpur police criminal investigation. But Indonesia has said such a ban would be ineffective because the elusive underground group has no established organization. However, officials have pledged to aggressively fight terrorism. Bali meanwhile tried to get back to business, with shops installing shatterproof glass and some hotels hiring one security guard for every 10 rooms. Police have been out in force, patrolling the streets and airport. Bali has been a popular tourism destination for decades -- particularly for Australians, with more than 200,000 making the trip last year. |
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Southeast Asia | |
Indonesia Questions Jailed Militants | |
2005-10-05 | |
EFL: Police questioned several jailed militants across Indonesia on Wednesday, intensifying efforts to identify three suicide bombers who attacked crowded restaurants on the resort island of Bali. Investigators said they had received at least one phone call from a man who said he recognized one of the alleged bombers featured in grisly photos of the suspects' severed heads that have been circulating nationwide in newspapers and on TV. "He identified one of the bombers," said Abdul Madjid, the police chief in Solo, a city on the main island of Java. Madjid said the caller told police the man in the photo resembled a resident of Solo, the site of a hard-line Islamic boarding school attended by several notorious militants convicted in terrorist attacks. The dead man was only identified by one name, Gareng, and police were following up on the tip, Madjid said. The police chief didn't provide further details about the suspect or his school, saying only that the tip was being pursued.
Police said they questioned two convicted militants - Amrozi bin Nurhasyim and Imam Samudra - who were sentenced to death for their roles in the 2002 Bali bombings, said Bali police chief Maj. Gen. I Made Mangku Pastika said. "We are also asking them whether they recognize these people or not. So far the detained terrorists do not know them," Pastika said. Southeast Asian nations have gone on high alert to prevent a repeat of the Bali bombings. Hundreds of thousands of troops were on standby, security was tightened on beaches and along borders. Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono said Wednesday the bombings "have spoiled Indonesia's reputation in the eyes of the world." He called on his military to stamp out the scourge of terrorism in the world's most populous Muslim nation. On Bali itself, shops put up shatterproof glass and some hotels were hiring a security guard for every 10 rooms. Police were on the streets and at the airport in force, and officials say searches and metal detector screenings will become even more common. "Bags will be checked. Cars will be checked. This is an inconvenience, but it is for safety reasons," said Tourism Minister Wacik. "The world community has become more immune to bombs going off. London and Madrid recovered, and we will recover." Saturday's bombings have prompted new Indonesian calls for access to Riduan Isamuddin, a Southeast Asian terrorism mastermind detained by the United States since 2003. Washington has refused previous requests, saying it did not want to compromise an investigation of the Indonesian cleric, widely known as Hambali. | |
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