World - AP Asia 
 
Indonesia Officials Probing Blast 
Tue Oct 15, 9:28 PM ET
By TIM SULLIVAN, Associated Press Writer 

JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) - Indonesian officials
interrogated a security guard and another man Tuesday
about the deadly nightclub bombing in Bali and said
traces of C-4 plastic explosives were found at the
scene of the blast. 

With Indonesia under increasing international pressure
to combat terrorism, a violent Muslim group with ties
to Indonesia's military disbanded — the first apparent
sign the government was getting serious about moving
against Islamic extremism. 


The announcement by the group, Laskar Jihad, came as
the accused spiritual leader of another extremist
network linked to the al-Qaida terror network said he
would submit to police questioning. 


Most of the nearly 200 victims of Saturday's blast
were foreign tourists, and the grim toll prompted
calls for Indonesia to crack down on al-Qaida
terrorists and local allies blamed for the bombing.
President Bush (news - web sites) said Monday he
planned to talk to Indonesian President Megawati
Sukarnoputri about the need to stop terrorism. 


"You cannot pretend it (terrorism) doesn't exist in
your country," Secretary of State Colin Powell (news -
web sites) said, adding he hoped the attack
"reinforces Indonesia's determination to deal with
this kind of threat." 


Police spokesman Maj. Gen. Saleh Saaf said police have
questioned at least 47 people about the blast — and
that a security guard and another man were being
"intensively interrogated." He denied reports the two
had been arrested. 


The second man was the brother of a man whose
identification card was found at the blast scene,
intelligence officers said on condition of anonymity. 


Traces of the military explosive C-4 — a puttylike
plastic explosive used in the attack two years ago on
the USS Cole (news - web sites) in Yemen — were found
at the scene, National Police Chief Da'i Bachtiar
said. Richard C. Reid, the alleged al-Qaida-trained
shoe bomber thwarted on an American Airlines flight,
packed explosive that appeared to be C-4 into his
shoes. 


In past cases in Indonesia, whenever C-4 has been
found in any bombing it has been traced to the
military, raising speculation the explosive was bought
or stolen from military stocks. 



Days after the explosion ripped through the jammed
Sari Club, Bali was still struggling to cope with the
corpses. 


At the island's main hospital — now largely used as a
morgue — dozens of volunteers cared for the bodies,
icing them down or loading them into refrigerated
containers to slow decomposition in the tropical heat.
Australia, which lost dozens in the attack, was
arranging for the bodies of its citizens to be
repatriated. 

Two American deaths have been confirmed: Steven Brooks
Webster of Huntington Beach, Calif.; and Deborah
Snodgrass, who had been living in Bali. U.S. officials
said four Americans were injured and between one and
four were missing. No other names have been released
but family members identified Jake Young, a former
University of Nebraska football player working in Hong
Kong, as among the missing. 

Dozens of shoulder-high flower wreaths were left at
the edge of the morgue, where hundreds of people
waited, watched over by armed Indonesian soldiers. 

Indonesia's intelligence chief, Mohamad Abdul
Hendropriyono, told reporters his organization was
cooperating with foreign agencies in the
investigation. 

"This attack has been well planned and it required
expertise in handling high-tech (bombs)," he said. "It
is a very complicated task and is outside the ability
of local hands." 

Megawati's government is in a delicate position —
looking for ways to prevent terrorism without sparking
further attacks or unrest in Indonesia, the world's
most populous Muslim nation. 

Laskar Jihad's dissolution is a relatively easy way
for Jakarta to show its willingness to fight
terrorism, and perhaps gain ground in its efforts to
restart American military aid. The group is not
suspected in the Bali bombings, but putting it out of
operation gives the government much-needed public
relations points amid accusations it has turned a
blind eye to extremist violence. 

In recent months, the activities of the group, which
has deep ties to Indonesia's military, have become an
increasing embarrassment for authorities. 

As the Bush administration pushed to re-establish ties
with the Indonesian military — cut in 1999 in the wake
of abuses in East Timor (news - web sites) — Laskar
Jihad's military connection was cited by congressional
critics as proof the military continued to represent
the main threat to the country's fragile democracy. 

Achmad Michdan, legal adviser to Laskar Jihad, which
has waged sectarian warfare against Christians on the
outlying Maluku islands, told reporters in Jakarta the
group was disbanding. 

Michdan insisted the decision was not connected to the
bombing and was rooted in theological issues. "It is
an internal matter," he said. 

In Australia, Prime Minister John Howard said his
nation would seek the listing of Jemaah Islamiyah — a
shadowy pan-Asian network believed linked to al-Qaida
and suspected of involvement in the nightclub bombing
— as a terrorist organization. 

Australian officials "have received indications from
other countries ... that that move will be supported,"
he said in Parliament. 

The suspected spiritual leader of Jemaah Islamiyah
said he would voluntarily submit to police
questioning. Muslim cleric Abu Bakar Bashir planned to
meet with police Wednesday in Jakarta, said his
brother Umar Bashir. 

The meeting was in connection with a libel case Abu
Bakar Bashir has filed against Time magazine, which
recently published allegations that implicated him in
other terrorist activities, his brother said. Abu
Bakar Bashir has denied involvement in Saturday's
blast. 

Jemaah Islamiyah is believed to have four tons of
ammonium nitrate, a chemical that has been used to
make bombs, purchased by a suspected Malaysian member
accused of allowing two of the Sept. 11 hijackers to
use his apartment in 2000. 

Indonesia previously insisted there was no threat of
violent extremism on its soil, despite the discovery
of an al-Qaida-linked terror network in neighboring
Singapore and Malaysia. 

The shift came Monday after a Cabinet meeting, when
Defense Minister Matori Abdul Djalil said: "We are
sure al-Qaida is here." 



=====
Koran-Salatiga (KORSAL) Info: groups.yahoo.com/group/koran-salatiga

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