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Bomb-hit Indonesia to take new security measures

6 août 2003, 20:00

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Indonesia, reeling after a devastating car bomb attack on a luxury hotel killed up to 16 people, said it would unveil tough new security measures as police yesterday hunted for the perpetrators. Singapore?s Straits Times newspaper reported that the Jemaah Islamiah (JI) militant Muslim group had claimed responsibility for the blast, the second major terror attack to hit the world?s most populous Muslim nation in a year. The attack badly damaged the JW Marriott Hotel, part of a US chain. The daily, which did not make clear how it had received the message, said ?a JI operative? had described the attack as a ?bloody warning? to Indonesian President Megawati Sukarnoputri not to clamp down on militants. ?This is a message for her and all our enemies that, if they execute any of our Muslim brothers, we will continue this campaign of terror in Indonesia and the region,? it quoted the JI operative saying.

Security above human rights

Jakarta blamed JI for last October?s Bali bombings, which killed 202, many of them Australian revellers in two nightclubs. Tuesday?s blast came two days before the first verdict in trials for that atrocity is to be delivered. One foreigner, a Dutch executive of Rabobank, was among those killed. Four Singaporeans, two Americans, two Australians and several New Zealanders were among 150 wounded. Confusion clouded the death toll, with Jakarta police saying up to 10 had died while Australia said the number killed had risen to 16 in an attack clearly intended to target foreigners. International condemnation was swift. The United States offered Megawati help in bringing those behind the suspected suicide bombing to justice. New Zealand Foreign Minister, Phil Goff, pointed the finger at JI as the likely perpetrators of the blast. ?It?s almost inevitable when you have a group like Jemaah Islamiah that sooner or later they will be successful. They tragically have been again on this occasion,? Goff told. ?The government will impose these restrictions as we are determined to prevent the deaths of more victims. Their lives are worth more than the price of human rights,? the Jakarta Post quoted the Chief Indonesian Security Minister, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono as saying. In a first step to track down those responsible, police said they would issue a sketch of the owner of the car but did not say if the individual was a suspect in the blast. ?Police have obtained physical features from the previous owner of the car and we will issue a sketch based on that,? Erwin Mappaseng, head of the criminal investigation department, told reporters. Officials have said a suicide bomber probably caused the blast, which ripped through the lobby and set fire to dozens of cars and taxis. Windows in the 33-storey hotel were blown out. Debris still littered the Marriott and two adjacent buildings yesterday. Hundreds of police had cordoned off the area and police forensic experts are on the scene. ?This is a clear message that the war against terrorism in the region must be pursued without let-up,? Philippine President Gloria Macapagal Arroyo told ASEAN Finance Ministers in Manila.

?I bet they were anti-American?

?Vigilance must become a way of life for the region even as we maintain normalcy in the course of work and business.? Indonesians were shocked by the bombing. ?This is sadistic. I bet they were anti-American,? said Tambunan, a middle-aged man as he stared up at the Marriott?s shattered windows. Twisted metal lay in front of the hotel. The shells of two burned-out cars had yet to be removed. Security has already been stepped up in Jakarta, with guards checking cars before they entered some building compounds. The Australian school said security had been raised to the highest level at its two campuses in Jakarta, but the atmosphere was relaxed and pupils were arriving as usual. Australian Prime Minister, John Howard, urged Australians in Jakarta to take care and recommended other Australians to avoid any non-essential travel to Indonesia.

Dean Yates

Inquiry

Police make closer link to Bali blasts

Explosives and the methods used in a powerful blast at a Jakarta hotel were similar to those used in the Bali bomb attacks, Indonesian police said, making a stronger link between the two strikes. Asked if there was a link to the Bali bombings, Erwin Mappaseng, head of the criminal investigation department, said: ?The materials used were similar. There were low explosives and high explosives, the low was black powder and the high TNT." Marriott Hotel was in an area named as a potential target that was found in notes seized from Jemaah Islamiah suspects who were arrested along with a huge cache of potassium chlorate, TNT, detonators and weapons in a sweep in central Java last month.

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