http://arabnews.com/indonesian-police-foil-plot-attack-foreign-embassies

Indonesian police foil plot to attack foreign embassies
  a..  
  Indonesian anti-terror police, Densus 88, secure a terror suspect's house 
during a raid in Mojosongo, Solo in Central Java on Saturday. (AFP)

   |    |  A A 
Associated Press

Saturday 27 October 2012

Last Update 27 October 2012 8:18 pm
JAKARTA, Indonesia: Indonesia’s anti-terror squad arrested 11 people suspected 
of planning a range of attacks on domestic and foreign targets including the US 
Embassy and a site near the Australian Embassy, police said Saturday.The 
suspects were arrested in raids Friday and Saturday in four provinces, national 
police spokesman Maj. Gen. Suhardi Alius said.
He said the suspects belonged to a new group called the Harakah Sunni for 
Indonesian Society, or HASMI.“From evidence found at the scene, we believe that 
this group was well prepared for serious terror attacks,” Alius said.


Police seized a number of bombs, explosive materials, a bomb-making manual and 
ammunition, Alius said. They also found a 3-kilogram (6.6-pound) gas cylinder 
filled with highly explosive material, which had been assembled at a house in 
the East Java town of Madiun. Videos and images of attacks on Muslims in 
various parts of the world were also recovered, he said.Alius said the group 
planned to target the US Embassy in Jakarta and a plaza near the Australian 
Embassy and the local office of US mining giant Freeport-McMoRan. It also 
planned to attack the US Consulate in Surabaya and the headquarters of a 
special police force in Central Java, he said.


It was unclear how far the plans had advanced. Alius said police are still 
investigating whether the group has ties with established terrorist 
organizations such as Jemaah Islamiyah. An investigator who spoke in condition 
of anonymity because he was not authorized to provide information to the media 
said HASMI’s apparent leader, Abu Hanifah, was a Jemaah Islamiyah sympathizer.


Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim-majority nation, has been battling 
terrorists since the 2002 bombings in Bali by militants linked to Jemaah 
Islamiyah which killed 202 people, mostly foreign tourists.
Subsequent attacks have claimed more than 50 people, mostly Indonesians. The 
government has arrested more than 700 suspected terrorists and killed dozens 
more in an attempt to root out militants.
Earlier this month, police warned of a terrorist threat in Bali targeting a 
ceremony commemorating the 10th anniversary of the bombings. The country’s 
security alert was raised to its highest level.


Last month, police arrested 10 Islamist militants and seized a dozen homemade 
bombs from a group suspected of planning suicide attacks against security 
forces and plotting to blow up the Parliament building. The alleged bomb maker 
turned himself in to police while wearing an empty suicide vest. Recent terror 
attacks in the country have been carried out by individuals or small groups and 
have targeted security forces and local “infidels” instead of Westerners, with 
less deadly results. The arrests announced Saturday appear to be the first in 
recent years to involve a group that allegedly planned to target foreign 
facilities.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke