FYI

---------



Suicide bombing suspected in Tentena attack 

Ruslan Sangadji and Rendi A. Witular, The Jakarta Post, 
Palu/Jakarta

The recent bomb attacks in Tentena in Central Sulawesi may have 
been 
the work of a suicide bomber as one victim identified as Iskandar 
was 
not known to locals, according to police, Christian and Muslim 
leaders.

The possibility was voiced during an interfaith dialog on Sunday 
evening led by priest Renaldy Damanik from the Central Sulawesi 
Christian Church Communion (GKST) and a Muslim cleric, Adnan 
Arsal. 

The two said Iskandar, one of the 20 people killed in Saturday's 
incident, was a stranger among local Christian and Muslim 
communities. 

On Monday, Renaldy said the Muslim and Christian communities had 
agreed not to blame each other for the bombing, and had pledged to 
help the police find the suspects. 

Central Sulawesi Police chief of detectives Sr. Comr. Tatang Somantri 
confirmed Iskandar's identity, saying that his office was focusing 
their investigations on his movements before the blast. 

The man's identity was revealed after police found an unofficial card 
with his name on it in his pocket, Tatang said. 

Suicide bombings are the modus operandi of attacks carried out by the 
regional Jamaah Islamiyah terror group, which two fugitives, Azahari 
bin Husin and Noordin Muhd. Top, allegedly belong to. 

Police hold Jamaah Islamiyah responsible for the 2002 Bali bombings, 
the 2003 attack on Jakarta's JW Marriot Hotel and the 2004 Australian 
Embassy blast, all of which involved suicide bombers. 

In Jakarta, Vice President Jusuf Kalla said on Monday there were 
strong indications that Azahari and Noordin were behind the attack on 
the crowded Tentena market, some 60 kilometers north of Poso. 

The two fugitives were probably assisted by new recruits in Central 
Sulawesi, Kalla said. 

"The suspects in the bombing are the 'old guys', with Azahari and 
Noordin likely to be involved. The incident is connected with 
previous attacks," he said. 

Kalla said the likely motive behind the bombings was to reignite new 
religious fighting in the troubled area where hundreds of people have 
died in outbreaks of sectarian violence during the past five years. 

"I am really concerned with the police's inability to capture these 
two fugitives. However, to replace National Police chief (Gen. Da'i 
Bachtiar), we will need some time. We will see this development 
later," he said. 

Da'i earlier said capturing Azahari and Noordin would be a top 
priority for police during the first 100 days of President Susilo 
Bambang Yudhoyono's presidency. 

Separately, House of Representatives Speaker Agung Laksono said on 
Monday the Tentena attack showed it was time to replace Da'i and 
Indonesian Military chief Gen. Endriartono Sutarto. There were plenty 
of good candidates waiting in the wings, Agung said. 

The bombing was solid proof the government had failed to provide 
Indonesians with the standard of security it had constantly promised 
during the election campaign, he said. 

"The facts show this. There's still no security for the public." 

Central Sulawesi Regional Representatives Council (DPD) member Ichsan 
Loulembah said the bombing was a slap in the face for the government. 

"The bombing took place when the President was abroad visiting other 
nations and promoting Indonesia as a safe country for major 
investment," he said. 

A special House team, which was set up in December to investigate 
previous bombings in Poso, is scheduled to deliver its findings and 
recommendations about the string of terror attacks in the area during 
a House plenary session on Tuesday. 

The team is expected to suggest the government issue a special decree 
on the coordination of the police and the military as the operational 
separation of the two forces remains one of the major hurdles to 
resolving the Poso conflict. 

In Palu, Central Sulawesi Police spokesman Adj. Sr. Comr. Rais D. 
Adam said on Monday his office has questioned 12 witnesses to the 
recent attack. 

"The National Police headquarters has sent several units to support 
the investigation. But there is not yet any plan to deploy a large 
number of personnel (there)," he said. 

Tentena, which was spared from the earlier communal violence that hit 
Poso, now has the second-highest death toll for a bomb attack in 
Indonesia after Bali, where two bombs killed 202 people. 
 




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