http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2012/09/11/bombs-set-attacks-policemen-buddhists.html

Bombs set for attacks on policemen, Buddhists
Iman Mahditama and Yuli Tri Suwarni, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Headlines | 
Tue, September 11 2012, 9:23 AM 



The National Police said on Monday that the bomb-making materials found in 
several areas in Greater Jakarta had been prepared for a string of terror 
attacks targeting police officers and Buddhists. 

Police spokesman Brig. Gen. Boy Rafli Amar told reporters that suspected 
terrorist Muhammad Thoriq, who surrendered to the police on Sunday, admitted 
that his group had planned to attack the police’s Mobile Brigade (Brimob) 
command center in Kelapa Dua, Depok; a police station in Salemba, Central 
Jakarta; the office of the police’s Densus 88 counterterrorism unit and the 
Buddhist community. 

Boy said that the Buddhists were targeted in relation to the religious violence 
involving the Buddhist majority and the Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar. 

The officer said that Thoriq, one of the bomb makers, was planning to detonate 
the bomb himself. “It is true that he was one of the ‘grooms’,” Boy said, using 
the term used by the militants to describe suicide bombers. 

In the past few days, the police have arrested a number of suspected militants 
believed to be connected to the terror shootings in Surakarta, Central Java, 
that killed one policeman last month. They also found bomb-making materials in 
Tambora, West Jakarta, and in Beji, Depok, where the bomb exploded prematurely, 
injuring at least five people. 

Thoriq allegedly made the bomb found in Tambora. He fled his house after his 
neighbors found out about his activities. From his house, the police 
confiscated bomb-making materials such as sulfur, potassium, charcoal, aluminum 
powder, two boxes of nails, duct tape, four 9-volt batteries, five 
25-centimeter pipes filled with explosives, electronic switches and several 
detonators.

In their latest operation, the Jakarta Police said that in a joint operation 
between the city police and the police’s anti-terror squad Densus 88, they 
raided a rented house in Bojonggede, Bogor, on Monday morning, after its tenant 
Arif, 26, was found to be connected to the Depok blast. “Arif was arrested at 
around 9 a.m. [on Monday morning]. He is a member in Thoriq’s group but was not 
in Depok when the blast occurred,” Jakarta Police spokesman Sr. Comr. Rikwanto 
said.

Arif’s uncle Deni, who serves as a community unit chief in Arif’s local 
neighborhood, said that Arif once worked at the so-called Pondok Bidara 
orphanage in Beji where the bomb went off on Saturday night.

According to Deni, Arif had been approached by a man named Anwar who tried to 
influence him with talks of jihad. Arif reportedly was uncomfortable with the 
idea and tried to avoid Anwar. “Anwar called Arif all the time and [Arif] 
didn’t want to pick up the phone. He even changed his phone number because he 
was desperate to cut all communications with Anwar,” Deni said.

>From the house in Bojonggede, police confiscated pipes cut into pieces and 
>filled with explosives, seven 9-mm bullet magazines, iron tubes for gun 
>barrels and silencers, gas masks and notes on how to make bombs.

Jakarta Police spokesman Rikwanto confirmed that Thoriq was involved in the 
Saturday night bomb blast in Depok. “Thoriq was on the scene when the blast 
occurred. He was among several people who escaped the scene shortly afterward,” 
he said. 

Witnesses reported that two men fled the scene on a motorbike, and another man 
on foot, just after the bomb rocked the house in Beji. Police seized a large 
stash of bomb-making materials, including six pipe bombs, three grenades, a 
Berreta pistol, two machine guns, potassium chloride, five 9-volt batteries and 
an electric detonator that were found in the house.

The police also found a letter that was addressed to Thoriq’s mother, wife and 
baby boy. “Thoriq’s letter said that he is looking for Allah,” Boy said. 

The police are still trying to identify the man who was critically injured in 
the Depok blast. “We have received DNA samples from possible family members. 
But none of them could identify the victim due to the extent of his injuries,” 
Boy said. (nad)

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