REf: Rumah yatim piatu dijadikan pabrik bom?  Waktu pemboman pertama di Bali 
beberapa tahun silam, Dr Amin Rais memberikan komentar bahwa teman-temannya 
yang bergelar doktor tak bisa bikin bom sehebat yang diledakan? Barangkali bisa 
disarankan kepada  Dr Amin Rais bahwa  kalau teman-temannya hingga kini masih 
juga belum sanggup, silahkan kursus di Depok antara lain pada rumah yatim piatu 
atau mungkin juga pada taman kanak-kanak. 

http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/home/indonesia-police-say-orphanage-in-depok-blast-was-a-bomb-workshop/543303



Indonesia Police Say 'Orphanage' in Depok Blast Was a Bomb Workshop
September 09, 2012

 Indonesian "Densus 88" anti-terror squad officers arrive at a site in the town 
of Depok, in the outskirts of Jakarta on September 9, 2012, following the 
explosion of a bomb in a building listed as an orphanage late September 8. 
Indonesian police said three people were injured after an explosion at a house 
near Jakarta suspected to be a bomb workshop. (AFP Photo/Adek Berry) 


Depok. Indonesian police on Sunday said that the house near Jakarta where an 
explosion left at least three people seriously injured was suspected to be a 
bomb workshop.

The blast took place late Saturday in a building listed as an orphanage in the 
town of Depok, in the outskirts of Jakarta, national police spokesman Anang 
Iskandar said in a text message.

“Three people were injured, one seriously, in the explosion,” he said, adding 
that the severely-injured male victim had a broken arm and burns covering 
around 50 to 70 percent of his body.

Earlier reports indicated as many as six may have been injured.

Among materials seized from the house were grenades, detonators and potassium 
chlorate, Iskandar said.

Jakarta police spokesman Rikwanto said the orphanage “might be used as a facade 
to hide their terrorist activities”.

Two suspects fled the scene, an eyewitness told police.

Rikwanto said police were investigating if this blast was related to previous 
incidents linked to terrorism. Last week, police discovered explosive materials 
in a house that partially caught fire in West Jakarta.

“We believe these terrorists were preparing bombs in the house. We are 
investigating if they are from the same group,” he told AFP.

“The explosive materials found in the latest blast were similar to those found 
in West Jakarta,” he added.

Dozens of armed security personnel, including from the anti-terror police and 
bomb squad, on Sunday guarded the single-story concrete house and blocked the 
main road, according to an AFP photographer at the scene.

Part of the roof collapsed and the windows were shattered, she said.

Residents recalled hearing a “sound like thunder” and seeing black smoke 
billowing from the house during the blast.

“The explosion was so loud, it sounded like thunder. People shouted “Bomb, 
bomb!” and we all ran as fast as we could. I was so scared that I kept tripping 
as I was running,” drinks seller Joko, who like many Indonesians goes by only 
one name, told AFP.

“I hope the police will catch the perpetrators soon. I feel unsafe staying 
here,” the 62-year-old said.

Earlier this month, a shootout in Solo in central Java left two terrorist 
suspects and an anti-terror officer dead.

Muslim-majority Indonesia has waged a crackdown on militant groups over the 
past decade with anti-terror police claiming the scalps of some of the 
country’s most notorious terrorist suspects in bloody raids.

Over the last decade, Indonesia has suffered a series of attacks by Jemaah 
Islamiyah — blamed for the Bali bombings in 2002 that left 202 dead — but has 
seen no major incidents since the bombings of two hotels in Jakarta in 2009.

The country has seen a shift to smaller terror cells, however, which attempted 
two suicide bombings on a church and police mosque in 2011 with explosives made 
from nails and bolts, killing only the bombers themselves.

Agence France-Presse

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