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Six Injured in Homemade Bomb Blast in Depok
September 09, 2012

 Police officers inspect a house supposedly used by the Pondok Bidara Orphanage 
Foundation in Beji, North Depok, where an explosion on Saturday night left one 
person in critical condition, seriously injured three and wounded two others. 
(Antara Photo) 

Six people were injured when a homemade bomb exploded in a house reportedly 
used as an orphanage in Depok, West Java, Saturday night. 

The explosion rattled windows in Beji, North Depok and damaged a home on Jalan 
Nusantara. One neighbor, who was on the scene shortly after the 9 p.m. 
explosion, said that two men fled from the house. A banner for the Pondok 
Bidara orphanage foundation was hung on the front of the home. According to 
neighbors, the building is also used for Koran recitals. 

Officers removed a fully-completed bomb and assorted bomb-making materials from 
the scene Saturday night, including plastic bags, gunpowder and pipes, 
according to the National Counterterrorism Agency (BNPT). Police also found 
several firearms, including two guns with attached silencers. 

"There are two [guns] with silencers," BNPT chief Insp. Gen. Ansyaad Mbai said 
on Sunday. "There are many explosives and active bombs that have been secured."

The blast left one person in critical condition, seriously injured three and 
wounded two others, according to Antara News Agency reports. 

The critically injured man beared a resemblance to Toriq, an alleged terrorist 
who was placed on the police's wanted list after escaping officers in Tambora, 
Beji police chief Adj. Comr. Agus Widodo told TVOne reporters. The man suffered 
a serious burns and an injury to his neck in the explosion and has been moved 
to Police Bhayangkara Hospital for treatment. The extent of the man's burns 
have made it hard for police to identify him, Agus said, adding that officers 
may perform a DNA test. 

Two others injured in the blast were identified as Mulyadi Tofik and Febri 
Bagus Kuncoro, according to the Indonesian newspaper Kompas. 

Eight people have been questioned in connection with the blast, including four 
people found in the home, Agus said. 

"We have taken eight people in for questioning, all as witnesses," Agus said. 
"There will be one more, the one that is in critical condition."

Police are investigating whether this explosion has any connection to a recent 
string of terrorist attacks on police in Solo, Central Java, or a plot to set 
off bombs in Jakarta. 

The guns seized were similar to those allegedly used by Firman, an alleged 
terrorist arrested in Depok who was involved in the Solo shootings, the BNPT 
chief said. 

"Whether it is related to Firman, it is still under investigation," Ansyaad 
said. "They used a similar gun, but [these guns have] no markings of the PNP 
[Philippine's National Police]. It was a Pietro Barreta [Italian-made] gun."

But Ansyaad said that the weapons might have come from the Philippines.

"The guns are homemade, but surely are not Indonesian made," he said. "They are 
probably from Philippines. No other documents were found."

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