Bali bombing mastermind killed in police raid

Jakarta, Sep. 17 (ANI): Terrorist mastermind Noordin Mohammed Top was killed in a police raid on a militant hideout in Central Java on Thursday, Indonesian police have officially confirmed.

The 41-year-old Malaysian-born extremist was one of four militants killed in the raid near Solo, national police chief Bambang Hendarso Danuri told reporters.

The terrorist, who was on the run for almost seven years, was identified using fingerprint analysis, Danuri said.

“He is Noordin M Top,” Danuri said, sparking a round of applause throughout the room.

Noordin led a hardline splinter group of terror organisation Jemaah Islamiah.

He was the suspected mastermind of July’s attacks on the JW Marriott and Ritz-Carlton hotels in Jakarta that killed seven, including three Australians.

Authorities believe he also masterminded a 2003 attack on the Marriott, a 2004 attack on Australia’s embassy in Jakarta and the 2005 Bali bombings that killed four Australians.

It’s believed he also helped plan the 2002 Bali bombings which killed 202 people, including 88 Australians.Police came close to catching Noordin several times but he always managed to elude capture.

Noordin’s death will be a major setback for Islamic extremists throughout Indonesia and Southeast Asia.

Prime Minister Kevin Rudd’s office said it was aware of reports of Top’s death.

“We are awaiting official confirmation from the Indonesian government,” Fairfax News quoted a spokesman, as saying. (ANI)

Suspected Jakarta bombing ‘mastermind’ was trained in Pak

Jakarta, Sep.9 (ANI): In yet another case which determines that terror is Pakistan’s principle export, it has been revealed that the prime suspect of the July 2009 Jakarta hotel attacks received military training in Pakistan.

Indonesia’s national police chief General Bambang Hendarso Danuri disclosed that Mohamad Jibril, who allegedly provided funds for the terror group responsible for the bombings, received training in Pakistan during 1999-2000.

“Jibril received military training from several Jemaah Islamiyah activists for about a year, from 1999- 2000,” Bambang told the House of Representatives.

“The training was conducted in Pakistan while he was studying there,” he added.

Mohamad Jibril alias Mohamad Rizky Ardhan alias Muhammad Jibriel Abdul Rahman was arrested two weeks ago.

He is believed to have played a key role in raising funds for the terrorist group led by Noordin Top, who belongs to Malaysia.

The Indonesian police suspect that the money was coming from Middle Easte countries such as Saudi Arabia and Yemen, however, it is yet to arrive on any conclusion.

Officials said they are still working to find more solid evidence against Jibril, who was nabbed after his cell phone number was found in Ali Muhammad bin Abdullah’s mobile phone.

Ali is a Saudi Arabian who was arrested a few days before Jibril, the jihadwatch.org reports.

It has also been revealed that Jibril’s uncle, Irfan S Awwas, was the chairman of a radical Islamic organization , Indonesia Mujahidin Council (MMI). (ANI)

Three Indonesian militants jailed for 12 years

akarta – An Indonesian court on Tuesday sentenced three Islamic militants to 12 years each for plotting terrorist attacks and killing a Christian teacher.

The three men – Sugianto, Adityawarman and Heri Purwanto – were among 10 people arrested in the South Sumatran provincial capital Palembang last year for alleged involvement in a plot to bomb a cafe and to kill Christian priests as part of a jihad campaign waged by the Jemaah Islamiyah regional militant group.

Judges at the South Jakarta district court found the three guilty of involvement in the murder of a Christian teacher in Palembang in 2007 and a conspiracy to blow up a cafe in neighboring West Sumatra the previous year.

Prosecutors said the militants aborted the plan after realizing that the cafe was frequented by women wearing Muslim headscarves.

Prosecutors have sought 20 years in prison for a Singaporean Muslim militant, Muhammad Hasan bin Zaynudin, suspected to be the leader of the South Sumatra cell.

Hasan has admitted he had met al-Qaeda leader Osama bin Laden and undergone military training in Afghanistan.

During the raids on the militants in June and July, police seized 20 assembled bombs, dozens of kilograms of potassium chlorate and other explosive materials as well as several hand grenades.

The country’s anti-terrorism police have arrested about 300 militants since the 2002 Bali bombings, which killed 202 people, but authorities said the threat of more attacks remained even though the country has not suffered an attack since 2005.(dpa)

Two Hindraf leaders among 13 released by new Malaysian PM

Kuala Lumpur, April 4 (IANS) Two ethnic Indian leaders of the banned Hindu Rights Action Force (Hindraf) are among 13 people released from detention ‘in a spirit of reconciliation’ by new Malaysian Prime Minister Najib Tun Razak.

Home Minister Syed Hamid Albar made the announcement Friday evening and said it was Razak’s wish ‘to see members of the society build the nation in the spirit of reconciliation towards the 1Malaysia concept’, The Star said Saturday.

‘It is a good start for the government and consistent with the policy of openness for reforms. He (Razak) has put the interest of the nation above self,’ Albar said.

The two Hindraf leaders being freed are V. Ganabatirau and R. Kengadharan, both 40 years old. They were among five detained under the stringent Internal Security Act (ISA) for organising a protest rally in November 2007.

Their two-year term would have ended in December.

The other three still in jail are M. Manoharan, Hindraf’s legal adviser and a legislator, Vasanth Kumar and P. Uthaya Kumar.

Vasanth Kumar and P. Uthaya Kumar have been unwell while in jail. They suffer from acute diabetes and complain of lack of proper medication. They have even complained of sugar being deliberately mixed in their food.

Hindraf claims to speak for the two million-plus ethnic Indian settlers, a bulk of them Tamil Hindus who came here during the British era. It complains of discrimination in jobs and education and destruction of Hindu temples.

Indians form eight percent of Malaysia’s 28 million population that has a majority of Malay Muslims and an estimated 33 percent ethnic Chinese.

Meanwhile, people began gathering outside the Kamunting Detention Centre in Petrak state Friday evening after Razak’s address, braving a heavy downpour, the newspaper said.

Of the others freed, seven were members of Darul Islam and three foreigners who were detained for falsifying documents and a member of Jemaah Islamiah.

The seven Darul Islam members freed are Binsali Omar, A. Artas A. Burhanudin, Idris Lanama, Francis Indanan, Mohd Nazri Dollah, Pakana Selama and Mohd Arasad Patangari, all of whom have been held since 2006.

The three foreigners (held since 2007) are Sundaraj Vijay (an Indian national) and two Myanmar citizens, San Khaing and Amir Hussain.

The Jemaah Islamiah member is Wan Amin Wan Hamat, who was detained in 2003. His detention period is due to end in 2011.

Albar, however, added that the government was determined to fight all forms of extremism.

‘The detention was to rehabilitate them and not served in the form of punishment.

‘We are happy with their rehabilitation and hope that they can now start to contribute to society,’ he said.