Yang model begitu sih sudah harus dihukum mati... Tidak usah didiskusikan 
lagi...

Eric Soesilo
[EMAIL PROTECTED]

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-----Original Message-----
From: "Nur Rochman" <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>

Date: Wed, 3 Sep 2008 08:17:25 
To: <Forum-Pembaca-Kompas@yahoogroups.com>
Subject: Re: [Forum Pembaca KOMPAS] Benarkah bom Bali hasil racikan Amrozi, 
dari toko kimia pinggir jalan?


Hukum Amrozi dkk karena sudah ada usaha dan kerja untuk membunuh orang lain
Amrozi dkk sudah akui bahwa merekalah sebagai aktor dan eksekutor bom bali
Hukuman mati memang bukan penyelesaian tetapi hukum sudah ditetapkan mau apa 
lagi
Yang jelas ini menjadi pelajaran bagi yang mau berfikir dan terus 
belajar..........

Siapapun dibalik Amrozi dkk yang jelas mereka juga manusia keji yang tidak 
insyaf atas kesalahannya
Yang berusaha melanggar hak hidup orang lain atas nama agama yang digenggamnya
Agama yang awalnya damai menjadi keras karena ulah segelintir pendakwah 
penyebar kebencian
Sehingga tukang reparasi HP bisa menjadi manusia buas tidak berperikemanusiaan.

Regards,
KangNoer
  ----- Original Message ----- 
  From: Satrio Arismunandar 
  To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] ; Forum Kompas ; ppiindia ; jurnalisme ; AJI INDONESIA 
; HMI Kahmi Pro Network ; Syiar Islam ; pantau ; [EMAIL PROTECTED] ; [EMAIL 
PROTECTED] ; Etalase Indonesia 
  Sent: Tuesday, September 02, 2008 8:48 PM
  Subject: [Forum Pembaca KOMPAS] Benarkah bom Bali hasil racikan Amrozi, dari 
toko kimia pinggir jalan?


  Sekadar mengingatkan (menjelang eksekusi Amrozi dkk):

  Berita BBC, Oktober 2002 menyatakan, bom Bali adalah bom  yang amat canggih. 
Ini diakui oleh para pakar bom internasional. Tidak sembarang orang bisa 
membuatnya dan memperoleh bahan-bahan pembuatnya. 

  Pertanyaannya, mampukah orang sekaliber tukang reparasi HP seperti Amrozi 
meraciknya sendiri dengan (seperti pengakuannya) membeli bahan dari toko kimia 
pinggir jalan?

  Dalam semangat gegap gempita untuk menghukum "teroris", banyak media lupa 
dengan detail seperti ini.....
  ====================================================================

  http://news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/asia-pacific/2329189.stm

  Wednesday, 16 October, 2002, 10:38 GMT 11:38 UK



  Plastic explosive clue in Bali bombing

  Indonesian police
  investigating the devastating bombing of a nightclub on the island of
  Bali have found traces of plastic explosive at the site of the attack. 
  The discovery of the explosives suggests a sophisticated bombing operation.



  Forensic process



  Identify components of explosive

  Take swabs from suspects, clothing and other sites

  Test for matches with explosive

  Trace manufacturer through analysis of components in residue





  Police say C4 explosive
  was used - a type manufactured mainly in the United States and used
  widely by military forces around the world.

  This has prompted
  speculation that if Islamic militants carried out the bombing, they may
  have had some help from elements in the Indonesian military which have
  been involved with resurgent radical Islamic groups since the fall of
  General Suharto in 1998.

  Indonesian police
  spokesman Brigadier-General Saleh Saaf said: "We have together with
  experts from the FBI processed the data jointly and we are now really
  certain that C4 explosive was used".

  USS Cole bombing

  The explosive and method
  used bear similarities to an August 2000 bombing in Jakarta which
  seriously injured the Philippine ambassador. Philippine intelligence
  officials blamed the radical Islamic network Jemaah Islamiah for that
  attack. 







  The police are searching the site for clues








  But C4 was also used in
  the bombing of the warship USS Cole in Yemen two years ago - an attack
  attributed to Osama Bin Laden's al-Qaeda network.

  Police are questioning two men in connection with the bombing in the resort 
of Kuta on Saturday.

  Indonesian police chief Da'i Bachtiar said the identity card of one of the 
men was found close to the bomb site.

  So far, the man has refused to say anything since being picked up. 
  But the discovery of traces of plastic explosive could be a vital clue to who 
was responsible.

  Any suspects, their clothing and their homes or workplaces can be checked for 
matching materials.

  Swabs, using a solvent, would be taken from skin, clothes and other 
materials. 

  However, experts warn
  that traces of substances can be passed from one person to another and
  are not in themselves indisputable evidence of someone's involvement in
  a bombing.

  Available 'at a price'

  French news agency AFP
  quoted a British manufacturer of C4, Mark Ribband, as saying that it is
  a white substance that resembles uncooked pastry and needs a detonator
  to make it explode.







  A large area was devastated by the blast






  Mr Ribband said that it is "a standard issue, military explosive", the trade 
in which is controlled carefully.

  "It's considerably more controlled than heroin, but if you want to buy heroin 
you can," he was quoted as saying.

  "Like all things, everything's available for a price," Mr Ribband said. 

  C4 was widely used by US
  forces in the Vietnam war, and like semtex it is hard to detect and
  easy to hide. It is stable, and therefore safe to handle.

  Experts from the US, Australia, France and Japan are helping the Indonesian 
police with their investigations.


  Laborious task

  Brian Caddy, Emeritus
  Professor of Forensic Science at Strathclyde University in Scotland,
  says that once the component substances in an explosive have been
  identified, it might be possible to trace the manufacturer.

  Governments have lists of explosive makers and would be able to check with 
them the make up of their products.

  If that process is
  completed, then there would be a more lengthy and laborious task of
  trying to track sales and distribution or even thefts of an identified
  explosive.

  The success of that search would depend on the accuracy of company records.

  As well as gaining clues
  from the type of explosive used, the discovery of any parts of a
  timing, detonation or firing mechanism would boost the investigation.

  'Lacking experience'

  Professor Caddy believes
  that although Indonesia is developing its own forensic capabilities -
  they recently opened a new laboratory in Jakarta - they lack the
  experience of Western scientists in this field.

  Britain has
  well-developed facilities - such as the Forensic Explosives Laboratory
  at Fort Halstead in Kent and the laboratory in Northern Ireland which
  works to the government's Northern Ireland Office.

  Forensic experts use any
  materials found at the scene of a bomb attack to compare the explosives
  and mechanisms with those used in other such attacks.

  This enables them to see
  if there are any common substances or methods of construction which
  could give clues to the identity of the bombers. 







  TALKING POINT











  Satrio Arismunandar 
  Executive ProducerNews Division, Trans TV, Lantai 3
  Jl. Kapten P. Tendean Kav. 12 - 14 A, Jakarta 12790 
  Phone: 7917-7000, 7918-4544 ext. 4023,  Fax: 79184558, 79184627 
http://satrioarismunandar6.blogspot.comhttp://satrioarismunandar.multiply.com  











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