Indonesië
Wilt u reageren op dit bericht? Maak met een paar klikken een account aan of log in om door te gaan.

Indonesië

Informatie- en nieuwsforum over Indonesië en Nederlands-Indië
 
IndexLaatste afbeeldingenRegistrerenInloggen

 

 Five suspected terrorists reported killed in Bali raids

Ga naar beneden 
AuteurBericht
Kesasar

Kesasar


Aantal berichten : 2586
Registratiedatum : 03-01-09
Woonplaats : Selandia Baru

Five suspected terrorists reported killed in Bali raids Empty
BerichtOnderwerp: Five suspected terrorists reported killed in Bali raids   Five suspected terrorists reported killed in Bali raids Icon_minitimezo 18 maa 2012 - 22:10




Mon, 03/19/2012


Five suspected terrorists were reportedly killed during police raids at two different locations in Bali late on Sunday.

Police have yet to issue an official statement on the nature of the raids and details on the casualties.

The first raid took place at around 10:15 p.m. in a budget hotel, Laksmi, on Jl. Danau Poso 99X, Sanur. The area is known as one of the most famous red-light districts in Bali, where people can easily obtain a cheap room from staff at budget hotels who rarely ask for valid identification from their guests.

Neighbors said that they heard a burst of gunfire at around that time.

"Three were killed here and another two in Soputan," Bali Legislative Council member I Made Arjaya, whose family home lies just 30 meters away from the site of the first raid, told The Jakarta Post.

Soputan is a street in a densely-populated area in west Denpasar.

A police source at the scene confirmed members of the group were believed to have been raising funds for terrorism via armed robberies.

“The five people are part of the group that masterminded the 2010 CIMB Niaga bank robbery in Medan (North Sumatra). We have tailed them for months before we make the raids,” the field operative, who wished to remain anonymous, told the Post on Sunday.

Police had confiscated firearms, he said, and some intelligence reports suggested that the group intended to plan robberies in order to generate money for future terrorist activities.

When asked about more detail of the arrest, the police source refused to reveal further information Sunday night, as it could disrupt police investigations.

But Bali Police spokesperson Sr. Comr. Hariadi later denied that the suspects were terrorists, describing them instead as professional robbers plotting to commit a heist.

He said that the suspects had been carrying firearms at the time of the raids


( x theJP)


Terug naar boven Ga naar beneden
Kesasar

Kesasar


Aantal berichten : 2586
Registratiedatum : 03-01-09
Woonplaats : Selandia Baru

Five suspected terrorists reported killed in Bali raids Empty
BerichtOnderwerp: Indonesia's Top Anti-Terror Cop Defends Fatal Bali Raids   Five suspected terrorists reported killed in Bali raids Icon_minitimedi 20 maa 2012 - 0:23




March 19, 2012


Indonesia's National Counterterrorism Agency (BNPT) defended Sunday's deadly raid of two suspected terrorist hideouts in Bali, explaining that police are allowed to use extreme force in "emergency" situations.

Five suspected terrorists were fatally shot as members of the National Police’s anti-terrorism unit Detachment 88 traded fire with the alleged terrorists in two Sunday night raids on the resort island of Bali, police said. Human rights activists have been critical of Indonesia's harsh treatment of suspected terrorists after it became clear that many suspects were being killed in police raids.

Alleged terrorists should be afforded the same legal process as any other offender, critics said.

BNPT chief Ansyaad Mbai explained that while there is no clear rule on using deadly force during anti-terror raids, 2010 presidential rulings allow officers to fire their weapons in "emergency situations."

“To date, no legal expert can define an emergency act of defense," Ansyaad said. "Maybe we have to draw the clear line as to when officers may use their guns."

But Sunday's raids were within the National Police's rights, Ansyaad said. The alleged terrorists were armed and police were involved in a shootout at the time.

Three of the suspects, Dd, 27 and U.H., 27, from Bandung and M., 30, from Makassar, were fatally shot during a raid on a rented bungalow on Jalan Danau Poso in Sanur. Two others were killed in a separate raid of a hotel on Jalan Gunung Soputan in Denpasar.

“All of the suspects resisted as they were being arrested. A shootout [between the suspects and the police] took place,” National Police spokesman Sr. Comr. Boy Rafli Amar has said.

Four different terrorist organizations operate in Indonesia, Jamaah Islamiyah, Jamaah Ansharut Tauhid, the Indonesian Islamic State (NII) and Tauhid Waljihad, Ansyaad said.


(x the JG)


Terug naar boven Ga naar beneden
Kesasar

Kesasar


Aantal berichten : 2586
Registratiedatum : 03-01-09
Woonplaats : Selandia Baru

Five suspected terrorists reported killed in Bali raids Empty
BerichtOnderwerp: Bali Attack Plot Shows Terrorist Threat Evolving in Indonesia   Five suspected terrorists reported killed in Bali raids Icon_minitimevr 23 maa 2012 - 2:04



Jakarta/Kuala Lumpur.
March 22, 2012


A foiled plot by suspected Islamic militants to attack and bomb targets in Bali, including a bar popular with tourists, marks an escalation of the violent threat in Indonesia as authorities race to stay ahead of rapidly evolving armed groups.

Five men were shot dead in police raids on Sunday on the island where nightclub bombings in 2002 killed 202 people — mostly foreign tourists — and forced the world’s largest Muslim country to confront violent Islamist groups on its soil.

Pictures of a villa where some of the men were shot dead, showing pools of blood on the floor of a garden hut, starkly illustrated the return of violence to the mostly Hindu island where militants last launched deadly bomb attacks in 2005.

Ansyaad Mbai, head of Indonesia’s National Counter Terrorism Agency, said the men had plans to bomb targets on the island, including the beach-front “La Vida Loca” bar. Police initially said the suspects were planning armed raids on money changers, jewelers and the bar, partly to raise money for future attacks.

“This group was planning not only armed attacks against those targets but also bombings,” Mbai said.

“At this stage we could not be sure of the scale but high or low, bombs are dangerous, especially in Bali. The impact would be huge,” he added.

Attacks in recent years have mostly been small-scale, but the latest plot suggests terror groups may be trying to raise their profile at a time when Indonesia’s economy is booming and it aims to play a bigger role on the world stage.

Bali held a high-profile regional summit last November attended by U.S. President Barack Obama and Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, among other leaders, and is scheduled to host the Asia-Pacific Economic Cooperation summit next year.

Latent Threat

Indonesia has scored notable successes in its battle against Islamic militancy since the 2002 bombing, arresting about 600 suspects and heavily disrupting the activities of the Jemaah Islamiyah group and its offshoots that police said had carried out the attacks.

But there has been a steady stream of violence as militants have reacted to the crackdown by splitting into smaller groups and targeted security forces and government officials.

Police officers were attacked last year in a mosque suicide bombing, drive-by shootings and by an attempt to poison drinking water - low-cost operations that require relatively little expertise and allow for easier recruitment.

“It just shows there is a latent threat in the background and it’s consistent,” said Kevin O’Rourke, a political risk analyst based in Jakarta. “The good thing is that the authorities have a pretty good track record, especially over the last two years in anticipating and preventing attacks.”

There have been no large-scale attacks on Western targets in Indonesia since 2009 when suicide bombers blew themselves up in two Jakarta hotels, killing nine people and wounding 53.

Prosecutors scored a major success last year when JI’s spiritual leader, Abu Bakar Bashir, was jailed for 15 years, following years of efforts to obtain a long sentence for the 73-year-old preacher seen as inciting hatred in his speeches.

Improved investigation and surveillance techniques by the “Detachment 88” police anti-terrorism squad, funded by the United States and Australia, have been credited for breaking up several plots - including the latest one in Bali.

Initial findings by investigators in Bali appear to highlight the fluid and unpredictable nature of militant groups in Indonesia, which has become an emerging-market darling of investors in recent years.

Police said that the men, aged between 27 and 32, were linked to an armed robbery group in northern Sumatra island and the so-called Solo group, which police say was behind a suicide bombing at a church last year and other attacks in central Java.

Mbai said no explosives had yet been found but that there was evidence the group had surveyed their targets, taken photographs and “analysed the impact”. An unknown number of suspects had escaped, officials said.

New Cells Keep Spouting

Andi Widjajanto, a defense analyst from the University of Indonesia, said the group appeared to be a “dormant cell” related to JI’s top bomb-maker, Dulmatin, who was killed by police in 2010.

Mbai said that some of the suspects were involved in gangs with links to narcotics distribution, adding to evidence that terror groups are increasingly funding themselves through criminal activities such as robberies.

“Indonesia’s government has been very successful preventing terror attacks. The special anti-terror detachment has built a much better capacity in recent years, but it has been failing to completely stop or erase new cells,” Widjajanto said.

He said the authorities were still falling short in efforts to disengage militants from terror groups and to plug the flow of smuggled weapons through the country’s vast, porous borders.

As the JI group has been broken up, suspicion of involvement in attacks has fallen on the Jemaah Ansharut Tauhid group, which was established by jailed cleric Bashir in 2008 with the stated aim of creating an Islamic state through peaceful means.

Police have accused several JAT members of involvement in attacks. Last month, the United States designated the group a foreign terrorist organization, raising pressure on Indonesia’s government to take a tougher line on the 1,500-strong preaching organization.

“It says it is peaceful but it is the most violent terrorist group in Southeast Asia,” said Rohan Gunaratna, head of terrorism research at Singapore’s S Rajaratnam School of International Studies.

“It is a terrorist organization that at times masquerades as a political and religious organization.”

Son Hadi, JAT’s spokesman, denied the legal group was related to terrorism, saying the accusations were a ploy led by the West to undermine the Islamic group.


(x the JG)


Terug naar boven Ga naar beneden
Gesponsorde inhoud





Five suspected terrorists reported killed in Bali raids Empty
BerichtOnderwerp: Re: Five suspected terrorists reported killed in Bali raids   Five suspected terrorists reported killed in Bali raids Icon_minitime

Terug naar boven Ga naar beneden
 
Five suspected terrorists reported killed in Bali raids
Terug naar boven 
Pagina 1 van 1
 Soortgelijke onderwerpen
-
» Eight Suspected Terrorists Detained
» Suspected Surabaya terrorists 'inspired by IS'
» Six suspected terrorists arrested in Bima allegedly linked with Poso network
» Islamic Defenders Front warns it’ll raids stores suspected of forcing employees to wear Santa hats
» Bali Man Reported to Police After Marrying 13-Year-Old

Permissies van dit forum:Je mag geen reacties plaatsen in dit subforum
Indonesië :: Berichten :: News in English-
Ga naar: