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Indonesia arrests 7 men accused of planning holiday attacks over X'mas or New Year

SubZero

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Indonesia arrests 7 men accused of planning holiday attacks over Christmas or New Year


PUBLISHED : Sunday, 20 December, 2015, 7:27pm
UPDATED : Sunday, 20 December, 2015, 7:27pm

Associated Press in Mojokerto

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Two Indonesian navy seals 'Denjaka,' in civilian clothes, take part in an anti-terror drill in Jakarta. Indonesia is ramping up security ahead of Christmas holiday season. Photo: EPA

Indonesia’s anti-terror squad has arrested seven men suspected of planning Christmas or New Year’s attacks in the world’s most populous Muslim nation, police said Sunday.

Abdul Karim, known by his alias Abu Jundi, was captured Saturday in Sukoharjo, a town in Central Java province, a day after three other suspected militants were nabbed in two separate locations in West Java province, said local police chief Lieutenant Colonel Andi Rifai.

He said Jundi is believed to have expertise in shooting and bomb-making because of his membership in Jemaah Islamiyah, an al-Qaida-linked Southeast Asian group blamed for the deadly 2002 nightclub bombings on the Indonesian resort island of Bali.

Their interrogation led police to arrest three other group members in Mojokerto town in East Java on Sunday, said Lieutenant Colonel Budhi Herdi Susianto, another police chief in Mojokerto.

Police seized bomb-making devices from the men’s homes, but no explosive materials were found.

Susianto said the men were using emails and phone conversations to plan attacks during the upcoming holiday celebrations.

“A police investigation managed to reveal their plan to launch a terror attack during Christmas or New Year's Eve celebrations,” Susianto said, without elaborating.

Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim nation, has seen a spate of deadly attacks by the Jemaah Islamiyah network, including the 2002 Bali bombings that killed 202 people, mostly foreign tourists. Strikes in recent years have been smaller and less deadly and have targeted government authorities, mainly police and anti-terrorism forces.

The government will deploy more than 150,000 security personnel to safeguard churches and public places around the country during Christmas and New Year’s, National Police Chief General Badrodin Haiti said.



 

SubZero

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Re: Indonesia arrests 7 men accused of planning holiday attacks over X'mas or New Yea


Six arrests after AFP intelligence helps foil terror plot in Indonesia


AAP
December 21, 2015, 7:24 am

Australia and Indonesia will hold law and security meetings in Jakarta, as police there foil a plot to bomb several targets, reportedly acting on Australian and US intelligence.

Justice Minister Michael Keenan and Attorney-General George Brandis will meet their counterparts for the first Indonesia-Australia Ministerial Council on Law and Security.

The visit aims to enhance bilateral cooperation in the areas of counter-terrorism, transnational criminal syndicates, intelligence cooperation and cyber security.

Combating violent extremism is also a focus for the talks, with Mr Keenan visiting several countries in the region in recent weeks to learn more about "counter messaging" strategies, to combat extremist propaganda.

The meeting comes as Indonesia's anti-terror unit Detachment 88 announced it had arrested six members of an Islamic State-inspired network in raids in five cities on Friday and Saturday.

The Jakarta Globe reported the raids were prompted by intelligence from the US Federal Bureau of Investigations and the Australian Federal Police.

An unidentified police source told the website the group was planning to bomb a series of Shiite communities in Pekalongan, Central Java, Bandung, West Java, and Pekanbaru, Sumatra.

Wire service AFP reported it had sighted documents showing one of the men, linked to an Islamic boarding school in Central Java, "was a candidate for a suicide bombing in Jakarta to be conducted on New Year's 2016".

Reports say a map of greater Jakarta was among the items seized in the raids, along with ball bearings, chemicals and an IS-style flag.



 
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