Khaleej Times Online >> News >> THE WORLD

    Videotape shows suicide bombers behind Bali blast
    (DPA)

    2 October 2005


    BALI, Indonesia - The three blasts on Bali which left at least 22 
dead and nearly 130 injured, including dozens of foreigners, was the 
work of multiple suicide bombers, the initial probe into the events 
showed on Sunday.

    A videotape recording, taken on a hand-held recorder from an 
injured victim inside one of the locations that was bombed, the 
Raja's restaurant in Kuta, allegedly captured one of the suicide 
bombers right before the attack.

    In the videotape, shown to journalists by authorities in Bali, a 
young Asian man, who police suspect is one of the bombers, in a black 
T-shirt and blue jeans can be seen walking into the establishment 
with his hand near his belt.

    He disappears from the camera and then can be seen again walking 
into the middle of the restaurant before he disappears from the 
screen again and a flash of light appears as the bomb is allegedly 
triggered.

    Bali Police Chief Made Mangku Pastika said in a the press 
conference on Sunday: "This is why I am convinced that this is a 
suicide bombing based on the scientific crime investigation and video 
footage."

    Police also showed photos of the severed heads of the three 
suspected suicide bombers, their faces easily identifiable, and 
explained how the preserved heads, upper torsos and legs and missing 
mid-sections indicated that they were likely the suicide bombers.

    Pastika during the press conference also revived the death toll 
down to 22, with two killed in the attack at Kuta and 20 in Jimbaran, 
saying the previous toll was due to the fact that there were 26 body 
bags, but that four of them contained body parts.

    The death toll included four caucasions and one Asian, as well as 
the suicide bombers, Pastika said.

    Police were hunting down two cars suspected of being used to 
carry the explosive materials, which Pastika said were high-explosive 
TNT possibly from outside Bali, in Saturday's night attacks at three 
different places in two locations in Bali's popular tourist areas of 
Jimbaran and Kuta.

    "We're still pursuing the (suspected) cars, including blockading 
the entrance and exit gates into and from the island," the state-run 
Antara news agency quoted Balis police chief, Inspector General I 
Made Mangku Pastika, as saying.

    Senior anti-terror official Police Major General Ansyaad Mbai 
said the attacks were most likely the work of three suicide bombers, 
but it was still too early to confirm the initial findings.

    "The early assumption is that the Bali bombing was a suicide 
bombing, carried out by three people," Mbai said in an interview with 
El-Shinta private radio.

    "To answer this, we should wait for the final investigation and 
lab test results. But based on what we have seen, this is a suicide 
bombing," he said.

    Mbai dismissed initial reports that the bombs were planted in the 
sand at the Jimbaran beach cafes as "speculation" and said they had 
received no reports of threats prior to the attack and were not 
expecting any.

    "Based on previous experience, there are no threats by this group 
before carrying out an attack," he said.

    National police chief General Sutanto said the explosive 
materials had been twisted around the suicide bombers' bodies. The 
exact nature of the materials was being investigated.

    Some reports put the death toll as high as 36, but police, 
doctors and health officials put the dead at 26 on Sunday. Among 
those killed are 14 Indonesians, three Australians, and one Japanese.

    "We fear the death toll will increase further," an official at 
Bali's Sanglah Hospital told Deutsche Presse-Agentur .

    At least 129 others were wounded, including 20 Australians, eight 
South Koreans, four Americans and four Japanese. One seriously 
wounded 60-year-old Australian was flown to Singapore for treatment.

    In a fresh statement after visiting the scene, President Susilo 
Bambang Yudhoyono, who arrived in Bali late on Sunday afternoon, said 
the attacks were most likely the work of "suicide bombers".

    "Preliminary investigation results show that this bombing was 
carried out by suicide bombers," Yudhoyono told a press 
conference. "The Indonesian government strongly deplores this 
inhumane act."

    "We will speed up the investigation, find the perpetrators, and 
bring them to justice to get equal punishment," he said.

    Yudhoyono expressed his appreciation for offers of assistance 
from other countries as part of international, regional and bilateral 
efforts to face this "terrorist act."

    Health Minister Siti Fadilah Supari said the treatment of the 
victim was made easier by the fact there were fewer burn injuries 
than following the October 2002 bombings in Bali, which had triggered 
fires, and ultimately left 202 dead, mostly foreign tourists.

    Medical teams had also become more experienced in dealing with 
such horror, she added. "Everything is on the right track," Supari 
told reporters in Bali.

    "We are thankful that they weren't burned. That helps a lot. And 
the team handling the victims are already trained from the last 
bombing," she added.

    While authorities were still working to identify the terrorist 
groups responsible for the blasts, many were already fingering the 
country's two most-wanted Malaysian terrorists, who continue to evade 
a nationwide manhunt.

    The fugitives, Azahari bin Husin and Noordin Mohammed Top, are 
believed to be senior members of the Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) regional 
terror group.

    They are blamed, with other JI members, for being behind the most 
deadly attacks in the country in recent years, including the 2002 
Bali bombings. JI has been linked to Al Qaeda, the terrorist network 
around Osama bin Laden.

    Saturday night's nearly simultaneous blasts occurred just 11 days 
before the anniversary of the devastating October 12, 2002 bombings 
on the island.

    Terror experts say factors that include the timing and nature of 
the blasts suggest the two Malaysians should be strongly suspected of 
being behind the attack.

    "We have to put the two Malaysians at the top of the suspect 
list," Sidney Jones, a leading expert on terrorism in the region from 
the International Crisis Group in Jakarta, told Deutsche Presse-
Agentur .

    "They're still at large, they,re determined to strike against 
Western targets, they have the skills and they have the resources," 
Jones said.

    The 2002 Bali blasts were followed by a bomb attack in August 
2003 on the J.W. Marriott Hotel in Jakarta, killing 12, and the 
September 2004 attack outside the Australian embassy, killing 11 and 
wounding some 180. Those attacks have also been linked to the two 
Malaysians.

    Citing intelligence reports, President Yudhoyono and others had 
warned since August that terrorists were likely to launch an attack 
in Indonesia over the next few months. The period August to October 
has been dubbed the "bomb season" due to the timing of the last three 
major attacks.

    The first two blast's on Saturday night hit beachside cafes 
between the Four Seasons Hotel and Bali Intercontinental Resort in 
Jimbaran on Bali,s south coast, while another explosion occurred 
outside the German-managed restaurant Raja's in Kuta Square in Kuta, 
the popular tourist centre and site of the 2002 bombings.

    The blasts was another nightmare for Bali's tourist industry, the 
island's lifeblood which had only recently recovered from the 
devastated terror attacks in October 2002.







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