http://www.smh.com.au/world/noordin-plots-more-bombings-on-the-run-20090814-el7k.html

Noordin plots more bombings on the run
Tom Allard in Jakarta
August 15, 2009 
As the frantic chase for Indonesia's most wanted man Noordin Mohammed Top moved 
into overdrive, Indonesian police came upon two men at a motorcycle repair shop 
in Temanggung in Central Java.

The men, Aris Susanto and Indra Arif, were, police believed, the terrorist 
bombmaker's look-outs. And they had valuable information to share. Noordin, the 
man allegedly responsible for the bombings of the JW Marriott and Ritz-Carlton 
hotels on July 17 - and terrorist attacks stretching back to the first Bali 
bombings - was hiding at a nearby farmhouse.

So began the 17-hour siege involving hundreds of heavily armed members of the 
police's elite Detachment 88 anti-terrorism and mobile brigade units. After 
countless rounds of automatic weapon fire, the detonation of explosive devices 
and use of high-tech robots, police hauled out a body last Saturday. They were 
giving each other high fives as camera crews recorded the celebrations.

There was only one problem. It wasn't Noordin. Rather, it was Ibrahim, the 
florist who worked at the two hotels and played the key role in smuggling 
explosives into the hotel.

Ibrahim's demise was an important scalp. But he was the only man in the house 
and he did not return fire during the siege. An unexploded bomb was reportedly 
recovered from the house after the siege. Questions are being asked as to why 
such a massive display of firepower was necessary. Could a nuanced operation 
have led to his capture alive, providing authorities with intelligence on 
Noordin?

Noordin's ability to avoid capture once again has highlighted the ongoing 
terrorism threat in Indonesia, and reveals something of his methods of evasion 
and the loyal servants who will do anything to protect him.

There are two possible scenarios behind his escape. He was in the house but 
managed to evade the huge police dragnet, with Ibrahim remaining behind to take 
on police and lay down his life. Or, more likely, he was never there and his 
look-outs gave false information to police to throw them off the trail.

Noordin is understood to travel with look-outs who are expert in creating 
diversions. They act as outriders, and the motorcycle helmet provides him with 
the perfect cover. According to Nasir Abas, the former Jemaah Islamiah leader 
who trained Noordin at the Hudaibiyah terrorist camp in the southern 
Philippines, Noordin is a master of disguise who relies on a wide network of 
sympathisers to hide him. ''Noordin hides by constantly moving from one place 
to another,'' Nasir told the Jakarta Globe.

''He takes advantage of people's friendly nature, and [sometimes] he wears a 
veil and a burqa.''

As Agus Widjojo, a security adviser to the Indonesian President, Susilo Bambang 
Yudhoyono, puts it: ''It's a Tom and Jerry game. The question is, is there the 
capability to cover off all of his avenues of passage? The answer is no. 
Indonesia is an easy place to hide.''

Asked if Noordin had friends in the police who were tipping him off, Mr Widjojo 
rejected the notion. ''I don't agree with that. He is the highest priority 
target. It's not something anyone in the police would risk.''

Indonesia's police have made significant headway in the past month. As well as 
Ibrahim, they have killed or captured eight others believed to be part of 
Noordin's network.

They have also uncovered an apparent plot to blow up Dr Yudhoyono this month 
with a car bomb, after a raid in Bekasi, near Jakarta, last Friday. As well as 
hundreds of kilograms of explosives, police uncovered detonators and a suitcase 
full of ball bearings and bolts that would have become deadly shrapnel. The 
plot, according to police, was conceived after the hotel bombings, as 
retribution for the execution last year of the three Bali bombers, who Noordin 
idolised and may have visited when he was incarcerated on the prison island of 
Nusakambangan.

The intelligence came from Amir Abdillah, the man who checked into the JW 
Marriott's Room 1808, the nerve centre of the July 17 hotel bombing operation. 
He told police the car bomb plot was hatched at a meeting with Noordin at a 
safehouse close to Jakarta a few days after the hotel bombings. The fact that a 
plan to kill Dr Yudhoyono could apparently be organised so quickly highlights 
the ongoing risks.

Noordin still has the core of his group operational. His premier bombmaker, 
Reno (aka Tedi), has not been caught, along with several other key members.

In a nationally televised address yesterday, Dr Yudhoyono called on Indonesians 
to join together to fight terrorism. ''Let us protect our citizens and our 
youth from misleading information and extremism . and help security officers by 
giving information about terrorism actors who are hiding in our society,'' he 
said


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