Bangkok Post

Bali marks 2004 bombings

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JAKARTA: Hundreds of mourners and survivors on Saturday commemorat­ed the 17th anniversar­y of the Bali bombings that killed more than 200 people on the Indonesian resort island, as Islamic militant attacks continue to plague the country.

Grieving families, attack survivors and representa­tives from several embassies laid flowers and lit incense sticks at a memorial in the popular tourist hub of Kuta, where radical Islamists detonated bombs in 2002.

Some victims’ family members broke down in tears and others even fainted during a candleligh­t vigil also held to mark the country’s deadliest terrorist attack and remember the 202 victims. Most were foreign holidaymak­ers from more than 20 countries but Australia suffered the biggest loss, with 88 dead.

“It has been 17 years but the wound is still fresh for me. It is difficult to fully heal but I am trying to let go of the past,” Endang Isnaini, 48, who lost her husband in the attack said while sobbing.

Another attendee, Takako Suzuki, said she came from Japan to Bali annually for the bombing anniversar­y to remember her son Kosuke Suzuki who died in the explosions which opened an Asian front in the war on terrorism one year after the Sept 11 attacks on the United States.

“I come here every year to give strength to myself and my other children. This is incredibly sad but we can move on from this,” Ms Suzuki said.

Local militant group Jemaah Islamiyah (JI), linked to al-Qaeda, was blamed for the bombings, which took place at two popular nightspots that accounted for all the victims.

Indonesia, the world’s biggest Muslim-majority nation, has long struggled with Islamist militancy and on Friday

President Joko Widodo ordered beefedup security measures to help prevent further attacks.

The interventi­on followed Thursday’s assassinat­ion attempt on chief security minister Wiranto, a 72-yearold former army chief, by two militants from a group linked to the so-called Islamic State (IS).

Last year, suicide bombers from the same IS-linked Jamaah Ansharut Daulah (JAD) detonated explosives in three churches in the country’s secondlarg­est city Surabaya.

 ?? AFP ?? Schoolchil­dren light candles during a memorial service for the victims of the 2002 Bali bombings in Kuta on Saturday.
AFP Schoolchil­dren light candles during a memorial service for the victims of the 2002 Bali bombings in Kuta on Saturday.

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