http://www.smh.com.au/news/world/christian-schoolgirl-beheadings-militants-jailed/2007/03/21/1174153155428.html


Christian schoolgirl beheadings: militants jailed 
March 21, 2007 - 8:17PM


Three Islamic militants were found guilty today of decapitating three Christian 
schoolgirls in Indonesia and dumping their bloodied heads in nearby villages, 
judges said.

They were sentenced to between 14 and 20 years.

The alleged members of the al-Qaeda linked Jemaah Islamiah network left a 
handwritten note close to the bodies, vowing more killings to avenge the deaths 
of Muslims in earlier sectarian violence on Sulawesi island.

"Wanted - 100 more heads," said Judge Lilik Mulyadi, reciting the letter's 
text. "Blood must be paid with blood, lives with lives, heads with heads."

Hasanuddin, 34, who goes by a single name, was sentenced to 20 years for 
masterminding the 2005 attack. His co-conspirators Lilik Purnomo, 28, and 
Irwanto Irano, 29, each got 14 years.

Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim nation, has been hit by a string of 
terrorist attacks in recent years targeting local Christians and nightclubs, 
restaurants and foreign embassies.

But the grisly nature of the beheadings - which occurred as the children were 
cutting through a cocoa plantation on their way to school - gave fresh impetus 
to the country's war on terrorism and was followed by scores of arrests.

The three militants had faced a maximum penalty of death by firing squad, but 
judges ruled that they deserved some leniency for cooperating with authorities, 
confessing and showing remorse.

Siregar told the Central Jakarta District Court that Hasanuddin ordered the 
slayings and helped dumped their girls' heads in three Christian-dominated 
villages. Purnomo and Irano were found guilty of "ambushing and beheading" the 
teenagers, he said.

It was not immediately clear if the three would appeal.

More than 90 per cent of Indonesia's 220 million people are Muslims, but 
Central Sulawesi province - the scene of religious clashes that left at least 
1000 people dead from 1998 to 2002 - has a roughly equal number of Muslims and 
Christians.

A peace agreement ended the worst of the violence, but tensions flared after 
the 2005 beheadings and again in September 2006, after the execution of three 
Roman Catholic militants convicted of leading a 2000 attack on an Islamic 
school that killed up to 70 people.

In January, 15 alleged Islamic militants were killed in a gunbattle in 
Sulawesi. Several others were arrested, including three others who have 
confessed to taking part in the beheadings but have yet to be brought to trial.

AP

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