The Star Malaysia

Indonesia nabs dozens of terror suspects

Police have rounded up 29, including some who planned to detonate bombs ahead of election results.

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JAKARTA: Indonesian police said that they have arrested dozens of Islamic-State linked terror suspects, including some who planned to detonate bombs at political demonstrat­ions when election results are announced next week.

Some 29 suspects were rounded up this month alone, with 60 in all detained since the start of the year in raids across the South-East Asian nation, they said.

Eight other suspects had been killed in confrontat­ions with authoritie­s, police said, including the wife of a militant who blew up herself and a child following a dramatic standoff at their home in March.

Some arrested suspects were skilled bomb makers and had fought alongside the militant group in Syria, as well as members of local extremist network Jemaah Anshurat Daulah (JAD), police said.

JAD has pledged allegiance to IS and was blamed for a wave of suicide bombings at churches in Indonesia’s second-biggest city Surabaya last year.

The world’s biggest Muslim majority nation has seen a string of attacks by militants since the 2002 Bali bombings, which killed more than 200 people, including scores of tourists.

National police spokespers­on Muhammad Iqbal yesterday described the latest arrests as a “preventati­ve strike” before the official announceme­nt of Indonesian elections, which were held on April 17.

There are concerns about street demonstrat­ions after presidenti­al challenger Prabowo Subianto, a retired military general, warned that protests could erupt over his claims of massive electoral fraud.

Subianto has vowed not to recognise next week’s results if they hand a re-election victory to president Joko Widodo, who has a lead of about 12 percentage points, according to unofficial polls.

Police said militants wanted to take advantage of any political unrest to spark chaos by using WiFi to remotely detonate bomb-filled backpacks at crowded demonstrat­ions.

“So we’re urging the public not to go out on the streets on May 22 because it could be dangerous as they (the suspects) wanted to attack crowds and police officers,” Muhammad Iqbal told reporters in the capital Jakarta.

Some 32,000 security personnel are expected to fan out across the capital next week, including in front of the General Elections Commission.

Subianto has attacked the Commission over allegation­s it was complicit in widespread electoral fraud. — AFP

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 ?? — AFP ?? Nabbed: Indonesian police displaying the terror suspects and the evidence recovered from them at a news conference in Jakarta.
— AFP Nabbed: Indonesian police displaying the terror suspects and the evidence recovered from them at a news conference in Jakarta.

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