The Jakarta Post, October 16, 2004
Two bomb-laden backpacks seized
Abdul Khalik, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta
The National Police said on Friday they were tracking down four men who fled their
home, including one who was wounded, after a small blast at a rented house in
Cianjur regency, West Java.
The men were also believed to be the owners of two backpacks of explosive devices
found by the police at the house in Cicurug village, about 80 kilometers southwest of
Jakarta, after the explosion at around 8:30 p.m. on Thursday.
"There was an explosion in a rented house in Cianjur. Four people who rented the
house ran away after they told local residents that the blast came from a gas stove.
But after we checked we found that it came a small bomb. We later found two
backpacks of active explosive devices there," said National Police chief Gen. Da'i
Bachtiar said.
He could not confirm whether the four people in question were fugitive terror suspects
Dr. Azahari bin Husin and Noordin Mohd. Top and their followers.
Azahari and Noordin are believed by police to be the masterminds of the 2002 Bali
bombings, the 2003 JW Marriott Hotel attack and last month's deadly
suicide-bombing at the Australian Embassy.
The two have reportedly recruited several new suicide bombers, including those who
carried out the blast outside the Embassy in Jakarta on Sept. 9, which killed 10
people, police say.
Da'i said that one of the four men fled from a nearby clinic after being treated there for
injuries in the explosion at the rented house.
The police chief did not rule out the possibility that the group was linked to Azahari
and Noordin, and that the suspects were still somewhere near Cianjur.
Separately, National Police chief of detectives Suyitno Landung Sudjono said that
apart from injuring one of the four men, the explosion also damaged a wall and some
furniture.
The police officers were now hunting for the four suspects to find out what they really
intended to do with the explosives, he added.
"We are also examining whether the explosives are similar with those used for the
bombing at the Australian Embassy," Suyitno said.
Police had earlier warned the public that Azahari and Noordin and their group,
remained dangerous because they were thought to have at least 200 kilograms of
explosives in their possession.
Suyitno, however, could not confirm the weight of the explosives found at the rented
house or whether they were of the same chemical base as that which Azahari and
Noordin supposedly possess.
Besides Azahari and Noordin, the police are still hunting down at least 10 other
suspects in the Sept. 9 attack, including Hasan, Jibril, Rois and Igun.
The hunt is being focused on West Java, the police added.
They have already nabbed eight suspects in the latest terror attack blamed on
al-Qaeda-linked terror network Jamaah Islamiyah, and identified Heri Golun as the
sole suicide bomber.
All contents copyright © of The Jakarta Post.
|