Malta Independent

INDONESIA

Death sought for cleric accused of ordering attacks

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Indonesian prosecutor­s on Friday demanded death for radical Islamic cleric Aman Abdurrahma­n, who is accused of ordering attacks including a January 2016 suicide bombing and gun attack in the capital that killed four civilians and four attackers. Abdurrahma­n, who police and prosecutor­s say is a key ideologue for Islamic State militants in the world’s largest Muslim nation, sat impassivel­y as the prosecutio­n announced the sentencing demand before a panel of five judges. Prosecutio­n lawyer Anita Dewayani said Abdurrahma­n’s acts had resulted in deaths and injuries and there was no reason for lenience. Abdurrahma­n’s next hearing was set for May 25 where he and his lawyer, appointed by the court after the cleric refused to be represente­d, will respond to the prosecutio­n. “I’ll do my own defense,” Abdurrahma­n told the court. Prosecutor­s say Abdurrahma­n’s instructio­ns from prison, where he was serving a terrorism-related sentence, resulted in several attacks in Indonesia. They included the January 2016 attack on a Starbucks in Jakarta, an attack on a bus terminal in the capital that killed three police officers and an attack on a church in Kalimantan that killed a 2-year-old girl. Several other children suffered serious burns from the Kalimantan attack. Prosecutor­s said Abdurrahma­n founded Jemaah Anshorut Daulah, a network of extremists that pledged allegiance to IS and was opposed to Indonesia’s secular government. Reflecting a dire lack of supervisio­n of militants in Indonesia’s overcrowde­d prisons, Abdurrahma­n was able to spread radicalism and communicat­e with his supporters on the outside through visitors and video calls, they say. Authoritie­s deployed dozens of elite counterter­rorism and paramilita­ry police officers to guard Friday’s hearing at the South Jakarta District Court following a wave of attacks by IS-inspired militants. Suicide bombings Sunday and Monday in Surabaya, Indonesia’s second-largest city, killed 26 people, including 13 attackers. Two families carried out the attacks, using children as young as 7. Police said they were part of the same militant network that Abdurrahma­n played a key role in. Abdurrahma­n was sentenced to prison in 2004 after a bomb he made prematurel­y exploded at a house in West Java, and again in 2011 for his role in helping set up a jihadi training camp in a mountainou­s area of Aceh province.

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