http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=3066&Itemid=202

Book Bombs In Indonesia

Written by Our Correspondent    
Wednesday, 16 March 2011 

We know who you are: Bashir
Jihadis seek to kill individuals who oppose them 

Indonesian Islamic extremists' war on those whom they consider apostates 
appears to be taking an ominous new turn with the mailing of bombs concealed in 
books to apparent opponents. The bombs raise fears that jihadi terrorists are 
now broadening their attacks to go after those who either battle terrorism 
directly or support a liberal interpretation of Islam. 

An Indonesian antiterror official said late Wednesday that the Jemaah Islamiyah 
jihadi group, to which militant cleric Abu Bashir Bakar is closely tied, is 
behind the'bombs.  Bashir is now on trial in a Jakarta courtroom, charged with 
inciting terror.

Although Indonesia has been the focus of a long series of bombings of hotels 
and nightclubs including one that took the lives of 202 people and injured 240 
more in Bali in 2002, they have not previously targeted single individuals.

None of the bombs succeeded in maiming or killing their intended targets 
although one policeman attempting to defuse a package had his hand blown off 
and two fellow officers were injured. President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono 
Wednesday ordered a probe of the bomb attacks and expressed sympathy for the 
victims and their families.

Yudhoyono has come under increasing criticism for what is perceived to be a 
lack of political will in seeking to rein in what is believe to be a small 
minority of fundamentalists in the community. Islamists have steadily used 
their influence in government to provide a legal foundation for many of the 
outrages that are now taking place.

As an example of the new strategy, one of the bombs was mailed to former 
Commanding General Gories Mere, who previously headed Indonesia's elite Densus 
88 counter-terrorism unit. Abu Bakar Bashir has labeled the unit as a tool of 
the United States, Australia and their allies. Bashir has also accused Densus 
88 of being made up of Christian officers. 

Mere led a series of successful raids against extremists, many of whom have 
been killed by police. He now heads the National Narcotics Agency.

Bashir's trial has in fact become a lightning rod for extremist forces. The 
72-year-old cleric is accused of fomenting violent attacks and running a 
training camp for militants in Aceh Province. He has been described as the 
ideological godfather of the violent Jemaah Islamiyah Islamic group, which is 
believed to have been behind a wide range of terror attacks including the 2002 
Bali bombings.

Bashir has issued a continuing series of outbursts from the courtroom, 
including one on Monday when he stormed out of the courtroom after his lawyer 
was expelled for the day as well. 

The first of the bombs was sent to a liberal Islamic scholar Ulil Abshar 
Abdalla, the co-founder of the Liberal Islamic Network. Ulil wasn't at his 
office, however. Others became suspicious and reported the package to police, 
who attempted to defuse it. The device exploded inside the network's office in 
East Jakarta. It was that bomb that blew off the hand of the officer attempting 
to defuse it and injured his two colleagues. 

The third bomb was sent to Yapto Suryosumarno, the chairman of Pemuda 
Pancasila, or Pancasila Youth. Pancasila is Indonesia's moderate official 
philosophy, stressing belief in one god, democracy, social justice and just and 
civilized humanity.

Police were said to be hunting Taufik Bulaga, alias Upik Lawang, a jihadi 
bomb-maker who in the past has specialized in "booby trap" bombs which can be 
concealed inside flashlights and other devices, including door jams, which 
exploded when the doors were opened. He remains at large.

The book bombs are just the latest in a series of disturbing events that have 
shaken Indonesia's image as a moderate Islamic nation. In February, an outraged 
mob of Muslim zealots descended on the compound of a small group of Ahmadiyah 
believers, burning them out and chasing them through nearby fields. Ahmadis 
believe their founder was a successor to the Prophet Mohammed. Three of the 
Ahmadis were run down by the mob and beaten to death. Two days later, a similar 
mob gathered outside the courthouse in another central Java town demanding 
death for a man accused of blasphemy for disturbing leaflets deemed to be 
insulting to Islam. Frustrated, they burned down two churches and rampaged 
through the town. 

Also there is the case of Murhali Barda, a former chapter leader of the 
hard-line Islamic Defenders Front, also known by its Indonesian language 
initials as the FPI, who was on trial for inciting violence, and who from the 
courtroom warned the Batak Christian Protestant Church against holding prayers 
in Bekasi, a predominantly Muslim district in West Java. He was suspended from 
the Islamic organization after his arrest in September. 

The FPI in particular has increasingly worried members of other religious 
faiths and moderates, accosting women wearing what the organization deems 
provocative dress, raiding nightclubs and intimidating non-Muslims. So far, to 
the dismay of many, authorities have refused to crack down on the FPI. In fact 
Yudhoyono late last year appointed Timur Prodopo to head Indonesia's National 
Police despite the fact that he publicly maintains close connections to the 
FPI. 

Pradopo at the time defended his relationship with the FPI, saying that: "We 
should be close to all [groups] to maintain security in this country." 

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