http://english.aljazeera.net/news/asia-pacific/2010/06/201062315215220293.html
Wednesday, June 23, 2010 19:39 Mecca time, 16:39 GMT Indonesia holds 'most wanted man' In the past year, Indonesian police have launched a nationwide crackdown on fighters [Reuters] Police in Indonesia have captured a man believed to be one of the most wanted "terrorists" in the country, officials say. The man thought to be Abdullah Sonata, an explosives expert, will be fingerprinted to confirm his identity, officials said. Police said they became engaged in a gun battle after they launched a raid in Klaten, a district in central Java, on Wednesday. One person was shot dead and three were arrested, one of whom is believed to be Sonata. "We captured three today, including Abdullah Sonata. One was killed during an exchange of fire," the source from the police's anti-terrorism unit, Detachment 88, told the Reuters news agency. The source said Sonata was found in possession of weapons. Police in Indonesia had put him at the top of their most wanted list. In the past year, Indonesian police have launched a nationwide crackdown on fighters, in which they have arrested or killed dozens of prominent fighters. Linked to Noordin Sonata was thought to have recently returned from the Philippines and started recruiting and training fighters. He is linked to the late Noordin Mohammed Top,the former head of a Jemaah Islamiyah splinter cell known as "al-Qaeda in the Malay Archipelago", responsible for major bombings until he was killed last year by police. In depth Profile Who was Noordin Mohammed Top? Timeline Indonesia bombings Focus Indonesia's war on Jemaah Islamiyah Video Indonesia police in shootout Witness to Jakarta bombing Jakarta blast caught on tape Noordin had been accused of involvement in July's twin suicide bombings at the Marriott and Ritz-Carlton hotels in Jakarta, the 2002 Bali nightclub bombing and attacks on the same Marriott hotel in Jakarta in 2003, as well as the Australian Embassy in 2004. Sonata was sought for his role in planning a training camp in Aceh region - on the northwestern tip of Sumatra island to the west of Java - and for recruiting new members. Indonesia's Metro TV said police also discovered documents that showed fighters were planning to attack the Danish embassy in Jakarta, but the police source declined to confirm the report. Denmark has been a frequent target in various countries following the publication in a Danish newspaper in 2005 of caricatures depicting the Prophet Muhammad. In May, police said a group had set up a paramilitary training camp in Aceh and planned to launch a series of attacks. These included a Mumbai-style hotel siege targeting foreigners and an assault on the president and foreign guests at an independence day ceremony in August. Sonata had previously been arrested in 2004 for concealing information about Noordin, blamed for a string of bomb attacks against Western symbols over the past 10 years. He was released in March 2009. [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]