http://thejakartagl obe.com/news/ terror-experts- and-muslim- leaders-tell- 
police-take- suspects- alive/334653
 
October 09, 2009 

Nurfika Osman & Candra Malik 
An officer setting up a police line around a house after a raid on Friday. 
Suspects accused in the Jakarta hotel bombings in July were reportedly killed 
on the outskirts of the capital. (Photo: Jurnasyanto Sukarno, JG)
 
Terror Experts and Muslim Leaders Tell Police: ‘Take Suspects Alive’
 
Terrorism experts and religious leaders were critical of police after two 
suspected terrorists were reportedly killed in a raid on Friday, saying 
security forces missed an opportunity to gather key intelligence on terror 
networks by failing to take them into custody. 

Saifuddin Zuhri bin Djaelani Irsyad and Mohamad Syahrir, both suspects in the 
July 17 bombings of Jakarta’s JW Marriott and Ritz-Carlton hotels , are 
believed to have been killed in a raid in Ciputat, Tangerang, west of Jakarta, 
after Muslim prayer services on Friday. Police declined to confirm their 
identities until the official autopsy was completed on Monday. 

Sydney Jones, an expert from the Jakarta office of the International Crisis 
Group, said police should have captured the suspects alive “because both of 
them know more information about terrorism links even though they are 
relatively new people.” 

Jones said their deaths did not signal an end to terrorism in the country, as 
thousands of other terrorists remained at large. 

“It is going to be very difficult to unravel terrorism networks if they are 
dead as we need to know their links,” she said. “Now anyone can be the 
successor and we do not know who he is,” Jones added, indicating that security 
forces are still unclear who might take the helm of terrorist groups after the 
death of Noordin M Top, who was killed last month during a raid near Solo. 

She declined to speculate on possible future leaders of the terrorist networks 
in Southeast Asia, but said other dangerous figures include Nur Hasbi, who is 
also wanted in connection with the hotel bombings. The list of wanted 
terrorists also includes Reno, alias Tedi, who has been at large since 2005, 
and Maruto Jati Sulistiono, who has evaded police capture since 2006. All three 
men have escaped police dragnets. 

Meanwhile, Jaleswary Pramodhawardani, a military expert from the Indonesian 
Institute of Sciences (LIPI), said police violated the country’s 2003 Law on 
Terrorism, which stipulated that they try their best to capture terrorists 
alive. 

“Murdering is not the police’s job. They have to find solutions to get the 
links instead of conducting military operations to get the terrorists,” she 
said. 

Zainal Adnan, the chair of the Solo branch of the Indonesian Council of Ulema 
(MUI), also raised questions about the shootings. “Why are they always caught 
dead? Why is it that all the public gets is more bodies? This is a bad for the 
image of Islam and its followers, who have shared the blame for terrorism,” 
Adnan said. He said killing the terrorists in such a raid would only increase 
suspicion that police were not equipped to tackle terrorism properly. 

“It should be enough for police to immobilize them by shooting them in the leg 
or another body part that won’t kill them. That way, the suspects can be 
brought to trial to reveal the case in front of a panel of judges,” he said. 

Muhammad Kurniawan, a lawyer with the Islamic Studies and Action Center, who 
arranged the funerals of suspected terrorists Bagus Budi Pranoto, Ario Sudarso, 
and Hadi Susilo, said he believed police had an ulterior motive in ensuring the 
raids ended in death. 

“Since the siege in M Zuhri’s house in Temanggung where Noordin M Top was 
thought to be hiding, and then it turned out he wasn’t, police embarrassment 
seems to have no end. It seems there’s a plan that requires all suspected 
terrorists to die rather than to be brought to trial, where it could be legally 
determined whether or not they were terrorists,” he said.



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