nT kan tukang kopas. Sampaikan saja "lalu"-nya sambil jalan.
--- In [email protected], "sunny" <ambon@...> wrote:
>
> Lalu?
>
>   ----- Original Message -----
>   From: ndeboost
>   To: [email protected]
>   Sent: Thursday, March 17, 2011 12:58 AM
>   Subject: [proletar] Re: Book Bombs In Indonesia
>
>
>
>   Ada berita penyelidikan korupsi, ada Cikeusik
>   Ada Wikileaks, ada bom buku
>   --- In [email protected], "sunny" ambon@ wrote:
>   >
>   >
>  
http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=30\
\
>   66&Itemid=202
>   >
>   > Book Bombs In Indonesia
>   >
>   > Written by Our Correspondent
>   > Wednesday, 16 March 2011
>   >
>   > We know who you are: Bashir
>   > Jihadis seek to kill individuals who oppose them
>   >
>   > Indonesian Islamic extremists' war on those whom they consider
>   apostates appears to be taking an ominous new turn with the mailing
of
>   bombs concealed in books to apparent opponents. The bombs raise
fears
>   that jihadi terrorists are now broadening their attacks to go after
>   those who either battle terrorism directly or support a liberal
>   interpretation of Islam.
>   >
>   > An Indonesian antiterror official said late Wednesday that the
Jemaah
>   Islamiyah jihadi group, to which militant cleric Abu Bashir Bakar is
>   closely tied, is behind the'bombs. Bashir is now on trial in a
Jakarta
>   courtroom, charged with inciting terror.
>   >
>   > Although Indonesia has been the focus of a long series of bombings
of
>   hotels and nightclubs including one that took the lives of 202
people
>   and injured 240 more in Bali in 2002, they have not previously
targeted
>   single individuals.
>   >
>   > None of the bombs succeeded in maiming or killing their intended
>   targets although one policeman attempting to defuse a package had
his
>   hand blown off and two fellow officers were injured. President
Susilo
>   Bambang Yudhoyono Wednesday ordered a probe of the bomb attacks and
>   expressed sympathy for the victims and their families.
>   >
>   > Yudhoyono has come under increasing criticism for what is
perceived to
>   be a lack of political will in seeking to rein in what is believe to
be
>   a small minority of fundamentalists in the community. Islamists have
>   steadily used their influence in government to provide a legal
>   foundation for many of the outrages that are now taking place.
>   >
>   > As an example of the new strategy, one of the bombs was mailed to
>   former Commanding General Gories Mere, who previously headed
Indonesia's
>   elite Densus 88 counter-terrorism unit. Abu Bakar Bashir has labeled
the
>   unit as a tool of the United States, Australia and their allies.
Bashir
>   has also accused Densus 88 of being made up of Christian officers.
>   >
>   > Mere led a series of successful raids against extremists, many of
whom
>   have been killed by police. He now heads the National Narcotics
Agency.
>   >
>   > Bashir's trial has in fact become a lightning rod for extremist
>   forces. The 72-year-old cleric is accused of fomenting violent
attacks
>   and running a training camp for militants in Aceh Province. He has
been
>   described as the ideological godfather of the violent Jemaah
Islamiyah
>   Islamic group, which is believed to have been behind a wide range of
>   terror attacks including the 2002 Bali bombings.
>   >
>   > Bashir has issued a continuing series of outbursts from the
courtroom,
>   including one on Monday when he stormed out of the courtroom after
his
>   lawyer was expelled for the day as well.
>   >
>   > The first of the bombs was sent to a liberal Islamic scholar Ulil
>   Abshar Abdalla, the co-founder of the Liberal Islamic Network. Ulil
>   wasn't at his office, however. Others became suspicious and reported
the
>   package to police, who attempted to defuse it. The device exploded
>   inside the network's office in East Jakarta. It was that bomb that
blew
>   off the hand of the officer attempting to defuse it and injured his
two
>   colleagues.
>   >
>   > The third bomb was sent to Yapto Suryosumarno, the chairman of
Pemuda
>   Pancasila, or Pancasila Youth. Pancasila is Indonesia's moderate
>   official philosophy, stressing belief in one god, democracy, social
>   justice and just and civilized humanity.
>   >
>   > Police were said to be hunting Taufik Bulaga, alias Upik Lawang, a
>   jihadi bomb-maker who in the past has specialized in "booby trap"
bombs
>   which can be concealed inside flashlights and other devices,
including
>   door jams, which exploded when the doors were opened. He remains at
>   large.
>   >
>   > The book bombs are just the latest in a series of disturbing
events
>   that have shaken Indonesia's image as a moderate Islamic nation. In
>   February, an outraged mob of Muslim zealots descended on the
compound of
>   a small group of Ahmadiyah believers, burning them out and chasing
them
>   through nearby fields. Ahmadis believe their founder was a successor
to
>   the Prophet Mohammed. Three of the Ahmadis were run down by the mob
and
>   beaten to death. Two days later, a similar mob gathered outside the
>   courthouse in another central Java town demanding death for a man
>   accused of blasphemy for disturbing leaflets deemed to be insulting
to
>   Islam. Frustrated, they burned down two churches and rampaged
through
>   the town.
>   >
>   > Also there is the case of Murhali Barda, a former chapter leader
of
>   the hard-line Islamic Defenders Front, also known by its Indonesian
>   language initials as the FPI, who was on trial for inciting
violence,
>   and who from the courtroom warned the Batak Christian Protestant
Church
>   against holding prayers in Bekasi, a predominantly Muslim district
in
>   West Java. He was suspended from the Islamic organization after his
>   arrest in September.
>   >
>   > The FPI in particular has increasingly worried members of other
>   religious faiths and moderates, accosting women wearing what the
>   organization deems provocative dress, raiding nightclubs and
>   intimidating non-Muslims. So far, to the dismay of many, authorities
>   have refused to crack down on the FPI. In fact Yudhoyono late last
year
>   appointed Timur Prodopo to head Indonesia's National Police despite
the
>   fact that he publicly maintains close connections to the FPI.
>   >
>   > Pradopo at the time defended his relationship with the FPI, saying
>   that: "We should be close to all [groups] to maintain security in
this
>   country."
>   >
>   > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>   >
>
>
>
>
>
> [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
>




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