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Suicide blasts kill 3 police officers

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JAKARTA: Two suspected suicide bombers killed three Indonesian police officers and injured 10 people last night in twin blasts near a bus station in the eastern part of the capital, police said.

The blasts went off five minutes apart at Jakarta’s Kampung Melayu terminal, police said.

National police spokesman Setyo Wasisto said three officers had been killed, and that examinatio­n of the scene had shown that there appeared to have been two suicide bombers.

Five officers and five civilians were wounded, he said.

Indonesia had suffered a series of mostly lowlevel attacks by Islamic State sympathise­rs in the last 17 months, but Wasisto said police had not confirmed any Islamist motive for yesterday’s bombing.

“The police officers were on duty to guard a group of people who were holding a parade. The parade hadn’t passed yet when the blast happened,” Wasisto said.

“The two suspects were both male. Their identities will be released later,” he said.

Wasisto said the explosives appeared to have been packed into pressure cookers. A similar bomb was used in February in the city of Bandung by a lone attacker, killed by police, whom authoritie­s suspected of having links to a radical network sympatheti­c to Islamic State.

Authoritie­s in the world’s biggest Muslim-majority nation are increasing­ly worried about a surge in radicalism, driven in part by a new generation of militants inspired by Islamic State.

In January last year, four militants killed four people in a gun and bomb assault in the heart of Jakarta.

While most of the attacks since then have been poorly organised, authoritie­s believe about 400 Indonesian­s have gone to join the militant group in Syria, and could pose a more lethal threat if they come home.

Last night, heavily-armed police cordoned off the area around the bus station with tape to hold back hundreds of onlookers, while bomb disposal officers with protective suits examined the area.

Transport Minister Budi Karya tweeted that he had asked staff to increase vigilance on the city’s transport network. – Reuters

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