Arab Times

‘Terror families’ behind suicide attacks

Shocking new terror modus operandi

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SURABAYA, Indonesia, May 14, (AFP): Their middle-class life, with talk of holidays and a love of pets, held no clues to the dark plan Dita Oepriyanto and his wife put in motion as they led their four children to their deaths.

Oepriyanto, 48, spouse Puji Kuswati and the kids — including two girls aged nine and 12 — all died on Sunday in coordinate­d strikes on churches in the country’s second-biggest city Surabaya.

To neighbours, the family was devoutly religious with an upstanding father who sold herbal medicine.

“He was once the head of the neighbourh­ood unit. I met him almost everyday at a mosque near his house,” Taufik Gani, 60, told newspaper Koran Tempo.

Online photos bearing 43-year-old Kuswati’s name show what appears to be the family smiling back at the camera, the two youngest girls in matching red hijab head scarves and holding flowers.

Kuswati had over 250 friends on a Facebook account packed with pictures of nature, river rafting and the family

1MDB in a sophistica­ted fraud that is now being investigat­ed in several countries.

The US State Department alleges that at least $4.5 billion were looted from the fund, and funnelled to the United States where it was used to buy everything from artwork to highend real estate and a luxury yacht. (AFP)

Ex-Politburo member loses bid:

Vietnam’s highest-ranking official jailed in decades lost his bid on Monday to set aside cats. She also said she was a fan of a local heavy metal band. Her last Facebook post was made in 2014. Kuswati and her daughters are now Indonesia’s first known female suicide bombers.

Two other families connected to the family and a local extremist network have been implicated in another series of explosions, that left most of them dead.

Taken together they reveal a shocking new terror modus operandi in the world’s biggest Muslim-majority country: whole families of suicide bombers.

Shift

That is a shift from when radical group Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) — behind attacks including the 2002 Bali bombing that killed over 200 — was synonymous with terrorism in Indonesia.

“The involvemen­t of women is new, especially with children,” said Nava Nuraniyah, an analyst at the Jakarta-based Institute for Policy Analysis of Conflict.

“During the JI (Jemaah Islamiyah) era it was forbidden to use women” in attacks.

a 13-year sentence for financial irregulari­ties when he was chairman of state energy firm Petrovietn­am, his lawyer said.

A court in the communist-ruled country upheld the sentence for former Politburo member Dinh La Thang, 57, who was arrested and tried in a crackdown on graft, mismanagem­ent and nepotism that felled many high-profile officials.

The Hanoi People’s High Court rejected an appeal by Thang against a January trial verdict that held him guilty of “economic mismanagem­ent”

IS by contrast has welcomed female fighters into its fold, and the attraction of using women, including young girls, in attacks is obvious, Nuraniyah added.

“Women are always seen as peaceful, so security guards are also more relaxed towards women as well,” she said. “There are tactical benefits.” On Sunday morning, Kuswati and her two daughters, who were wearing niqab face veils and had bombs strapped to their waists, walked onto the grounds of the Kristen Indonesia Diponegoro Church and blew themselves up.

They had been dropped off by Oepriyanto who then drove a bomb-laden car into the Surabaya Centre Pentecosta­l Church.

Indonesian authoritie­s have named Oepriyanto as the local cell leader of extremist network Jamaah Ansharut Daulah (JAD), which has pledged allegiance to IS.

His sons rode a motorcycle into Santa Maria church where they detonated explosives they were carrying, dying instantly.

at a coal-fired power plant overseen by PetroVietn­am.

“I am very disappoint­ed with the result of the trial because they didn’t look carefully into all the details I presented,” the lawyer, Dao Huu Dang, told Reuters by telephone.

State media this month blamed losses of 120 billion dong ($5.3 million) on Thang, saying he illegally assigned an incompeten­t subsidiary of the company to build the plant, instead of finding a competent contractor by a tender process. (RTRS)

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