Southeast Asia |
Indonesia raises ante in the war on terrorism |
2005-11-11 |
FWIW, this is a rather candid assessment of Indonesia's efforts to eradicate terror networks in that country, made by an Indonesian national (who appears to voice the majority sentiments of the Indonesian people). I apologize for posting the entire article, but past experience is that the Jakarta Post link won't last. They usually modify/change/delete the links after a day or so. The Jakarta Post, Endy M. Bayuni, Jakarta, November 11, 2005 The death of Malaysian terror master Azahari bin Husin in a gun battle with police outside a bungalow in the East Java hill resort of Batu on Wednesday marks a new phase in the war against terror that Indonesia began three years ago. His death will indeed be the first major breakthrough for Detachment 88, a specially trained antiterrorist force set up by the National Police in the wake of the first devastating bomb attacks in Bali on Oct. 12, 2002. Azahari, along with his fellow countryman Noordin M. Top, have become household names in the wrong sense of the word. The Malaysian pair has been identified as the masterminds behind a series of major terrorist attacks in Indonesia, dating back to the 2002 bombings of two night clubs in Bali. Since then, they have added to their list the suicide bombing at the J.W. Marriott hotel in Jakarta in August, 2003, the car bomb attack outside the Australian embassy in Jakarta in September, 2004, and the suicide bombs in two restaurants in Bali last month. In all these attacks, their trademarks were clear to the police -- so much so that people (that would be the Indonesian people, who hate this ugly terrorism) began to ask why two wanted aliens could be on the run for more than three years and continue to terrorize the nation without being found. In the wake of the second round of bomb attacks on Bali last month, we learned that Azahari and Noordin had been able to recruit and train new suicide bombers to do their dirty work, as well as raise the necessary money. They may be the two most wanted men in Indonesia, but most definitely they have not been running. According to the police, they had almost cornered Noordin in a hideout in Semarang earlier on Wednesday, but he managed to escape just before the raid took place. Azahari, by contrast, was not so lucky. Members of Detachment 88, led by Insp. Gen. Gorries Mere, had the house in Batu surrounded. There was a shootout and Azahari and two accomplices threw bombs at the officers before one of the bombs exploded and killed all three men inside. The police claim that Azahari blew himself and two others up must be treated carefully. Azahari may have trained suicide bombers, but he was not suicidal himself. For the last three years, the failure to catch Azahari and Noordin has been a slap in the face for the National Police, whose task it is, along with the State Intelligence Agency (BIN), to lead the Indonesian war on terror. Not only have they let the two Malaysians slip through their fingers, they also seemed to be one step behind as the pair continued to commit their evil deeds. The overwhelming majority of Indonesians see these guys, and their ilk, as evil and worthy of death. There have been many blunders, too, such as the raid on a house in Bandung from which the two were able to escape, and the wrongful arrest of several people who looked like them. No wonder foreign experts, including Singapore's grand old man Lee Kuan Yew, unkindly describe Indonesia as a safe haven for those associated with Jamaah Islamiyah (JI), the Southeast Asian terrorist network with ambitions of turning the entire region into an Islamic state. Many foreign governments have also accused Indonesia of not playing its part in fighting the growing threat of international and regional terrorism. Western governments, like the United States, Australia and Europe, have also poured money and resources in to help beef up the capabilities of the Indonesian Police and intelligence services in the counterterrorism arena. Members of Detachment 88, for example, are trained by Western experts. The fact that Indonesia is letting the West train its people may not seem like a big deal to most of us in the West, but it is. Indonesia is profoundly protective of its sovereignty, almost to the point of paranoia (OK, and sometimes beyond), and is very sensitive to internal criticisms that colonialism is being tolerated. The fact that Indonesia is using Western help cannot be emphasized too much. It is a key indicator that the country is deadly serious about removing the terrorist threat -- to the point of setting aside protectionist and anti-colonialist worries. The failure to arrest the two Malaysians has overshadowed the other achievements Indonesia has made in this war on terror. From the very beginning, Indonesia was determined to stick to the rule of law, including the presumption of innocence for suspected terrorists, in waging this war. The country has caught and sent to jail many terrorists -- some are even waiting on death row now -- for their parts in the bomb attacks going back to 2003. One of these is JI spiritual leader Abu Bakar Ba'asyir, who is serving time for his part in the first Bali bombing. This is a lot more than the United States, Australia and other countries have done in their own campaigns against terror. Prosecutions are rare or even non-existent in some of these countries. This is a point that seems lost on many in the West, but it is not lost on Indonesians. Regardless of that fact, Indonesia won't stop working to eliminate terrorism in the country, but they do wonder why we are not as aggressive. There have been times when the government came under pressure to give the security forces, including the military, extra powers, such as detaining people without charge and other draconian measures that supposedly could help them pursue this war more effectively. This did not, however, happen as the public, the House of Representatives and the media were quick to reject such proposals, fearing that these types of powers would eventually be used, or rather abused, by those in power. Even the decision by the President last month to bring the Indonesian Military (TNI) into the campaign against terror has been received with skepticism and warnings of the return to the militaristic years of Soeharto, with all the consequences that would entail. Following the President's decision, the TNI has revived the territorial function of its non-commissioned officers at village level, who, during the Soeharto years, were used effectively for the early detection of any antigovernment sentiments. We only have TNI chief Gen. Endriartono Sutarto's word that this function will not be abused. So, despite the fears of allowing a totalitarian regime to get going again in the country, Indonesia is so much more concerned about eliminating terror cells that the country is willing to take risks. At the end of the day, it is the National Police, more than any other institution, that should lead the war on terror in this country. Detachment 88's achievement in ending Azahari's reign of terror could not have been timelier, coming just as the nation was losing confidence in the police and we were about to resign ourselves to living with a constant terrorist threat every day. Now more than ever, there is no room complacency. Noordin is still at large, and he, and whoever else he has recruited, can still do harm and could even run amock. After Azahari's death, the police, particularly Detachment 88, must work even harder to catch Noordin and destroy whatever is left of his terrorist network. |
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Southeast Asia |
30 bombs found in dead terror suspects house |
2005-11-10 |
![]() Thirty bombs have been found in the house where terror suspect Azahari Husin blew himself up, Indonesian police said today. Australian Federal Police Commissioner Mick Keelty said Azahari's head remained intact after he blew himself up when cornered by troops inside a house in Indonesia yesterday. Local police are satisfied the remains are those of the Malaysian bomb expert. Indonesia's National Police Chief General Sutanto, who spent about 15 minutes inside the house, said that only two bodies were so far visible in the house but one appeared to be Azahari. "Two bodies are at the scene of the crime, and one of them looks physically like Dr. Azahari, but of course, DNA testings will be needed," General Sutanto said. "There are several parts of the body severed... but the head is still intact." Mr Keelty said initial facial identification had also been provided by General Gorries Mere, who's been heading the terrorist tracking team for three years. "So we've got no reason to believe it's not right. It's just that forensically we haven't properly identified him and that will take some time," Mr Keelty said. Australian Federal Police have played a key role in tracking down Azahari after a three year hunt for the man behind both Bali bombings, the attack on Jakarta's Marriott hotel in 2003 and last year's bombing outside the Australian Embassy in Indonesia. The 45-year-old - a key figure in the terrorist network Jemaah Islamiah - triggered a bomb, killing himself and two others after police moved in on a safe house in the East Java hill resort town of Batu yesterday afternoon. Mr Keelty said there were concerns there could be more explosives in the house, and AFP and Indonesian forensic officers are about to move in. "The AFP forensic team ... and the INP (Indonesian National Police) forensic team will be in this morning to go through the safe house," he said. "Obviously we're very concerned that other explosives are inside the house, so all that forensic work will be done over the next day or two." The AFP has been helping Indonesian police track Azahari since the 2002 Bali bombings which killed 202 people, including 88 Australians. Australian police had a "forward team" in the area during yesterday's operation, but Mr Keelty would give no details. Azahari's decision to take his own life came as no surprise to police. "We've believed for some time that that would be one of his options, and two other people have been killed in that part of the operation," Mr Keelty said. The breakthrough in the manhunt came last week when one of the bombers involved in last month's restaurant attacks in Bali was identified. "And that led the joint tracking team, the terrorist tracking team that we've had with the Indonesian national police and the AFP, into the region over the last couple of days," Mr Keelty said. "Some more precise information came through the day before yesterday and we've been working on that with the Indonesians since then." Mr Keelty said Azahari's death would hobble Jemaah Islamiah's operations. "It will not of course bring back any of the lives of the people who were killed or in many ways provide to them any sort of justice," he said. "But it will make a big dent in the operations of the radical terrorist groups in Indonesia." Another Malaysian terrorist also wanted over all four bombings, Noordin Mohamad Top, was not with Azahari and remains on the run. Azahari joined the South-East Asian terrorist network in the late 1990s and gained his explosives expertise at al-Qaeda training camps in Afghanistan. |
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Southeast Asia | |
Bali Boomer Mastermind Reported Killed in Indonesia | |
2005-11-09 | |
![]() "The body was in pieces but his face could still be recognised by two members of the anti-terrorist unit from Jakarta," journalist Karni Ilyas told Indonesia's ANTV. "He blew himself up together with the house," he added. Indonesia's Metro TV also reported that Azahari, who is a bomb expert, had been killed in the raid on the house. Azahari bin Nusin and Noordin Mohamed Top were also named as suspects in previous attacks in Indonesia - one in 2003 at the Marriot hotel in Jakarta which killed 12 people and another at the Australian embassy in 2004 which killed 11 people. Additional: INDONESIA'S most wanted man and the terrorist blamed for a string of attacks including the Bali bombings is believed to have blown himself up to avoid capture. Azahari Husin apparently triggered a bomb killing himself and two accomplices at his hideout in East Java yesterday.
Last night, witnesses said the area had been cordoned off and electricity had been cut. They said the situation remained tense as police surrounded a suspected terrorist compound. A Detachment 88 source said that the police raid was linked to the October 1 triple suicide bombing on three cafes in Kuta and Jimbaran in Bali which killed 20 people, among them four Australians. The ANTV television station, citing police sources, said Husin had been hiding out in the house and blew himself up rather than be captured. Gorries Mere, Indonesia's deputy chief of detectives, said: "We suspect it is him." | |
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Southeast Asia | |
Bomber named as hunt quickens | |
2005-10-06 | |
FIVE elite police teams began scouring the Indonesian archipelago by helicopter yesterday as the hunt for senior members of the Bali terror network was stepped up after the first suicide bomber was identified. Police in Surakarta, central Java, confirmed yesterday a man known as Gareng had been "a target of our investigations" since well before the weekend's blasts, but that he had escaped their surveillance recently. Police believe Gareng was the suicide bomber responsible for the last of three attacks on Saturday night. Husband and wife Colin and Fiona Zwolinsky and Jennifer Williamson, all of Newcastle in NSW, were killed in that assault, on Nyoman Cafe on Jimbaran Bay, south of Kuta. Mrs Williamson's husband, Bruce, and others from a large group of Newcastle holidaymakers were seriously injured. Surakarta police said they recognised Gareng from their files on Wednesday, after photographs of the three suicide bombers were distributed by investigators in Denpasar and published in newspapers early this week. "We matched that to an old photograph we have," a Surakarta investigator said. A source close to senior police in Jakarta said the investigation was now focused on searching for relatives and friends of the bombers, none of whose identities has been publicly released, and on rounding up people involved with the 2002 attacks. One of the teams is focused on east Java, where investigations are homing in on an area in the north around the town of Lamongan, near the provincial capital, Surabaya. Original Bali bomber Amrozi was arrested in the same region, at his home in the village of Tenggulun. The field teams are under the command of Indonesian counter-terrorist chief Gorries Mere. Another team is based in East Nusa Tenggara province, whose capital is Lombok, immediately to the east of Bali, and which stretches east to the border with East Timor. A third team is based in Banten province, west Java, and two more teams are based in Bali. The squads use helicopters to move quickly from town to town as they piece together elements of the bombers' trail. In the east Java town of Jember yesterday, local police said the region was on high alert for anyone on terrorist watchlists. In Bali, public access to the areas around the three bomb sites - two cafes in the upmarket dining area of Jimbaran Bay, south of Kuta, and Raja's restaurant in Kuta Square - is being restored, with police lines now drawn back to cover just the actual crime scenes. Investigation spokesman Brigadier General Soenarko dismissed reports yesterday that a man had been arrested in west Java on Wednesday based on his resemblance to fugitive terror mastermind Azahari Husin. Azahari, a Malaysian scientist who studied in Australia, and his associate Noordin Top, are being sought for their roles in the 2002 Bali bombings as well as in the latest atrocity. "I can tell you a man was arrested by immigration police in Sukabumi, west Java, but we can state there is as yet no connection to this case," General Soenarko said. "His name was Masnin Hasin, a Malaysian who after interrogation was found to have passports issued by Singapore and Malaysia as well as many ID cards. He is still in custody in West Java."
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Down Under | |
Check on Bali bomber coffee | |
2004-09-02 | |
THE Australian Government is checking reports that one of the Bali bombers was let out of prison to have coffee with an Indonesian government official in a Jakarta mall. Ali Imron was reportedly seen having coffee at Starbucks with the director of Indonesian narcotics and drugs, Brigadier General Gorries Mere. Foreign Minister Alexander Downer said today he had read the report and checked with his department to find out what was behind it. "I don't know that he's out and about ... he's certainly not been released and we don't want him to be released. We have checked, we have made absolutely sure that he's not going to be released. Asked if there was a possibility Imron could escape while outside jail, Mr Downer said: "Apparently not, so the Indonesians say."
The report said that when Imron and Mr Gorries were challenged by journalists, they and a number of black-clad armed police guards fled to a waiting car and sped off, Detik.com news said. "I walk often with Pak (Mr) Gorries," Imron said in response to questions. Brig Gen Gorries was one of the main investigators of the Bali bombings before he was transferred to narcotics at national police headquarters in Jakarta. The pair were spotted shortly after 7pm (2200 AEST) yesterday at a Starbucks store on the second floor of the newly opened Entertainment X'Nter and movie complex beside the swank Plaza Indonesia shopping centre and had coffee together for almost three hours. The head of Kerobokan Prison in Bali, where Imron was jailed, confirmed he had been temporarily transferred to Jakarta to help in a police investigation. | |
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Southeast Asia |
Bali bomber let out for coffee at the mall |
2004-09-01 |
One of the main Bali bombers has been let out of prison to have coffee at a popular shopping mall in central Jakarta, it was reported today. Ali Imron, the so-called repentant bomber sentenced to life imprisonment for his part in the attacks which claimed more than 200 lives, was spotted having coffee at Starbucks with the director of Indonesian narcotics and drugs Brigadier-General Gorries Mere. When challenged by journalists the pair and a number of black-clad armed police guards fled to a waiting car and sped off, Detik.com news said tonight. "I walk often with Pak (Mr) Gorries," Ali Imron said in response to questions. Imron was sentenced to life in jail after appearing deeply remorseful throughout his trial and repeatedly apologising to victims. His brothers, so-called "smiling assassin" Amrozi bin Nurhasyim and Mukhlas bin Nurhasyim were sentenced to death along with fellow attack mastermind Imam Samudra. After his arrest Ali Imron showed police how he mixed, then packed, the explosives into the bomb that was detonated outside the Sari Club. He also helped train the two suicide bombers involved in the attack and drove the bomb van to within a few hundred metres of the blast site. Brigadier-General Gorries was one of the main investigators of the Bali bombings before he was transferred to narcotics at national police headquarters in Jakarta. The pair were spotted shortly after 7pm (10pm AEST) at a Starbucks store on the second floor of the newly opened Entertainment X'Nter and movie complex beside the swank Plaza Indonesia shopping centre beside the Welcome Fountain in central Jakarta. They had coffee together for almost three hours and also moved on to the nearby Hard Rock Cafe. The mall is home to designer stores including Versace, Valentino and Zegna. Ali Imron's night out with Jakarta's rich and beautiful came amid fears several of the Bali bombers could walk free because of a recent court riling striking down anti-terror laws used to convict them. But Indonesia's government has promised none of the main bombers will ever be released as prosecutors prepare to try suspected Jemaah Islamiah spiritual leader Abu Bakar Bashir for links to terrorism. The head of Kerobokan Prison in Bali, where Ali Imron was jailed, confirmed he had been temporarily transferred to Jakarta to help in a police investigation. |
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