The Borneo Post

Plans to develop 2002 Bali bombing site anger Australia

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DENPASAR, Indonesia: Plans are underway for a multi- story developmen­t at the site of the 2002 Bali bombings that killed 202 people, Indonesian authoritie­s said yesterday, a decision that has angered neighbouri­ng Australia which lost dozens of citizens in the attacks.

Some 88 Australian nationals were killed in the Bali bombings after radical Islamists detonated explosives outside the US consulate and two popular night spots on the Indonesian resort island, killing mostly Western holidaymak­ers.

Developers were granted permission to build on the site of the destroyed Sari Club in December last year, said Made Agus Aryawan, head of the local investment board.

“This land belongs to an individual, it’s private property,” Aryawan told AFP.

“We cannot stop the owner from using it and regulation­s allow him to do so.”

The decision has been slammed in Australia, with Prime Minister Scott Morrison calling it ‘deeply distressin­g’.

Morrison, whose struggling centre-right government is up for election in several weeks’ time, said Canberra was working with Indonesian authoritie­s to resolve the issue.

Australia suffered the highest number of casualties in the explosions, which were the worst peacetime attacks on its citizens.

Local terror network Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) was blamed for the bombings in which people from at least 21 countries, including 38 Indonesian­s, were killed.

Aryawan said the vacant lot in the heart of bustling Kuta had been empty since 2002 and the permit would be valid for 30 years.

The five- storey complex will include a restaurant, offices and monument on the top floor, community leader I Gusti Agung Made Agung told AFP.

 ?? — AFP photo ?? Tourists gather in front of a building permit board at the site of the Sari Club, which was hit in the 2002 bombings, in Kuta near Denpasar on the resort island of Bali.
— AFP photo Tourists gather in front of a building permit board at the site of the Sari Club, which was hit in the 2002 bombings, in Kuta near Denpasar on the resort island of Bali.

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