Showing posts with label Noordin Top. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Noordin Top. Show all posts

Sep 17, 2009

A Terrorist Mastermind Whose Luck Ran Out - NYTimes.com

Indonesia UnitedImage by aulia.m via Flickr

BANGKOK — Over the past six years, Noordin Muhammad Top, considered to be the most violent Islamist militants in the region, had become an almost mythical figure among both those who sheltered him on the run and those who pursued him and finally killed him in Indonesia on Thursday.

While suspected of orchestrating the country’s main bombing attacks during those years, he repeatedly slipped away from capture, most recently in August when, after an all-night raid on a safe house, the police discovered they had killed the wrong man.

At a news conference on Thursday, the chief of the National Police, Bambang Hendarso Danuri, held up photographs of fingerprints that he said confirmed that this time, the man they had killed was Mr. Noordin.

Journalists joined the police in raising a cheer.

As the region’s main Islamist group, Jemaah Islamiyah, turned away from large-scale violence in recent years, and as its leading figures were killed or captured one after another, Mr. Noordin, 41, became the most wanted terrorism suspect and a symbol of violent jihad.

He made a name for himself as the most skilled, inventive and dangerous bomb maker in the country, and was suspected of planning bomb attacks on the JW Marriott hotel in Jakarta in 2003, on the Australian Embassy in Jakarta in 2004, in Bali in 2005 and at the JW Marriott and Ritz-Carlton hotels in Jakarta in July.

People who knew him and people who have studied his activities said Thursday that Mr. Noordin had a quiet magnetism that drew sympathizers to protect him, new recruits to join his splinter group and at least three women to marry and start families with him, giving him both cover and shelter.

“He was a quiet person, didn’t talk much, very pious,” said an Islamic clergyman, Abu Wildan, who knew him between 1993 and 2002 when he was a student and then the headmaster at Lukmanul Hakiem, an Islamic boarding school in Malaysia, where he was born.

“He prayed five times a day and was keen to look after and defend the Muslims’ rights,” Mr. Wildan said in a telephone interview. Mr. Noordin, who graduated from the University of Technology in Malaysia in 1991, taught computers, sociology and the Malay language at the boarding school, he said.

Mr. Noordin was also a networker, Mr. Wildan said, visiting friends who were sick and consulting with fellow teachers before making decisions at the boarding school.

The school preached the violent brand of jihad of Abu Bakar Bashir, the godfather of Jemaah Islamiyah, and Mr. Noordin embraced its radical version of Islam.

Like many other militants, he fled to Indonesia to evade a Malaysian crackdown on militants that followed the terrorist attacks in the United States on Sept. 11, 2001.

By this time he seemed to have matured into a more focused and ambitious man, according to Nasir Abas, a former Islamist leader who defected to the government in 2003 and who was for a time Mr. Noordin’s commander.

“He is very well-organized,” Mr. Abas said in a telephone interview. “He is very charismatic. He is articulate, he is very good in influencing people to join his cause, giving encouragement and motivation.

“That’s why he was good in recruiting his followers.”

But it was luck and circumstance that turned him into a leader, said Sidney Jones, an expert on terrorism with the International Crisis Group.

He did not set out be become a bomb maker but began working with explosives when another militant, who had been hiding them, said he no longer wanted to keep them, Ms. Jones said, speaking by telephone from Jakarta.

“It was only when he was forced into a decision about having explosives that he became a leader and turned into a bomb maker,” she said.

“And from that time on his status grew within the radical fringe of the extremist network,” she said. “It continued to grow with each act and with his ability to elude the police. And so it was largely through flukes and an astonishing run of good luck, rather than skill on his part.”

After breaking with Jemaah Islamiyah, Mr. Noordin founded a splinter group that, Ms. Jones wrote recently, “models itself, in terms of ideology, targets, and propaganda, after Al Qaeda. The question is whether he only imitates it or whether he has some structural affiliation.”

Mr. Noordin also made contacts and recruited supporters in a wide network that included Indonesia, Malaysia and the southern Philippines, according to Rohan Gunaratna, the head of the International Center for Political Violence and Terrorism Research at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore.

“He could preach a very radical version of Islam but could present it in a very, very simple way to attract students whom he managed to convince,” Mr. Gunaratna said in an interview.

Mr. Noordin’s death is a major victory for security forces, he said, but it will not mean an end to violence. “He leaves behind a significant network that will continue the fight.”

Sari Sudarsono contributed reporting from Singapore.

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Aug 12, 2009

Noordin Eluded Indonesian Police

JAKARTA -- Indonesian police said Wednesday that the man they shot dead during a 16-hour gun battle this past weekend wasn't Noordin Mohamed Top, one of Asia's most-wanted terrorists.

The finding means Mr. Noordin has yet again eluded Indonesian authorities, who have made significant strides in recent years toward dismantling militant Islamist groups but have yet to capture or kill their top target. Experts said the finding could further burnish his reputation among militants.

Mr. Noordin, a Malaysian citizen, is wanted for allegedly orchestrating a string of terrorist attacks in Indonesia, including the July 17 attacks on the JW Marriott and Ritz-Carlton hotels in Jakarta that killed seven people and two suicide bombers.

Police thought they had Mr. Noordin cornered in a rural farmhouse near Temanggung, a town in Central Java, a province on Indonesia's main island, when the siege involving hundreds of heavily armed officers began on Friday. A senior antiterrorism official said on Saturday that they had killed a man believed to be Mr. Noordin.

But the DNA tests revealed that the man killed was in fact called Ibrohim, a florist who worked at the JW Marriott and helped carry out the attacks, said Nanan Sukarna, a spokesman for the national police.

In a news conference Wednesday, police outlined how Mr. Ibrohim helped the two suicide bombers smuggle explosives into the hotel through the service entrance, skirting tight security at the main entrances.

Mr. Noordin has escaped police dragnets a number of times since 2003 after an earlier attack on the JW Marriott, his first major bombing. He has employed a series of disguises to avoid detection and has received shelter from radical Islamists in central Java and elsewhere in Indonesia.

"It's like Osama bin Laden escaping every time. It builds the legend about Noordin M. Top," said Sidney Jones, an expert on Indonesian radical Islamic groups at the Brussels-based International Crisis Group, a conflict-resolution body.

Although his network probably numbers only 30 people, experts say he remains a threat while on the run. Despite intense police pressure, which has led to the arrest of hundreds of terrorists in recent years, Mr. Noordin has been able to mount attacks like last month's hotel bombings with only a handful of supporters.

Still, the police have made progress in recent weeks toward dismantling the network. Apart from killing Mr. Ibrohim, police arrested two other people Friday in Temanggung who are believed to be Mr. Noordin's bodyguards.

In a separate raid over the weekend near Jakarta, police killed two alleged terrorists and arrested three others from Mr. Noordin's network. They uncovered 1,000 pounds of explosives in a safe house which the militants were using and a vehicle fitted to carry them.

Police said at the weekend that the likely target of the car bomb was the private residence of President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, which is located about three miles from the safe house outside Jakarta.

Doubts began to emerge late Saturday about the identity of the dead man. People who saw photos of the militant said it didn't resemble Mr. Noordin. Police refused to identify the body until a full autopsy and DNA tests were complete.

Write to Tom Wright at tom.wright@wsj.com

Aug 10, 2009

Indonesian Antiterror Victories

It looks like Indonesian police just missed catching Southeast Asia’s most wanted terror suspect over the weekend. But the operation to hunt down Noordin Mohamed Top and the related defusing of a bomb plot aimed at President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono still speak well of that country’s counterterror efforts.

Indonesia’s elite counterterrorism force, Detachment 88, has been hunting Noordin since the 2002 Bali bombings. The Malaysian-born terrorist is the head of a small splinter faction of al Qaeda-linked Jemaah Islamiya and is thought to be the mastermind of a string of attacks culminating in last month’s Jakarta hotel bombings. On Saturday, Indonesian authorities raided a farmhouse several hundred miles from Jakarta and another house near the capital, arresting five and killing three. Despite early reports Noordin was among the dead, he’s probably still alive. But Jakarta is getting closer to nabbing him.

This weekend’s raids will go down as another victory in the larger war on terror even though Noordin is on the loose. Detachment 88 has rounded up hundreds of Jemaah Islamiya members since 2002, including Jemaah Islamiya leader Abu Dujana in 2007, to the point where the group may no longer function as an effective terrorist operation. (Noordin’s splinter faction is the exception, and even then has only about 30 members.) Success breeds success: Suspects arrested in the wake of the July 17 hotel attack in Jakarta tipped off authorities to the location of Noordin’s safe house.

Just as importantly, police thwarted an apparent assassination plot against President Yudhoyono Saturday when they recovered hundreds of kilograms of explosive materials from another house near Jakarta. Terrorists allegedly intended to set off an explosion near one of the president’s houses or his motorcade. It’s unclear whether they would have been able to pull off such an act, but last month’s hotel bombings showcased how sophisticated Indonesia’s terrorists can be.

One important factor that has helped Indonesia’s fight against terrorism is that the government has thrown itself wholeheartedly into the effort. Mr. Yudhoyono extended his “highest gratitude and respect” to the police for their “brilliant achievement” on Saturday. Detachment 88 is among the best-funded police units in the country. Jakarta has also embraced the help of Australia and the U.S., which have helped train Indonesia’s antiterror forces.

Now Indonesia’s political class needs to step up its fight on the ideas front. Up to now, Jakarta has been tolerant of radical teaching and preaching despite its successes arresting terrorists. Witness the release in 2006 of Abu Bakir Bashar, convicted of conspiracy in the Bali bombing and well known for his radical teachings, or last year’s antipornography law passed as a sop to Islamic parties. That may be starting to change after religious parties lost ground in this year’s elections. There are signs Mr. Yudhoyono’s next cabinet appointments may take Islamic-party politicians out of key posts.

Mr. Yudhoyono won election in 2004 in part of a platform of security, and he won re-election earlier this year with an even larger mandate to defend Indonesia’s tradition of moderate Islam. This weekend’s events show how far Indonesia has come in the fight against terror, and how much more remains to be done. Mr. Yudhoyono would do well to stay the course.

Jakarta Police Investigate Killing

JAKARTA -- Police are investigating whether a man they killed over the weekend is one of Southeast Asia's most-wanted terrorists, following a pair of dramatic raids that may have foiled a plot to kill Indonesian president Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono.

Indonesian police killed three suspected terrorists -- including one who a senior antiterrorism official said was Noordin Mohamed Top, the main suspect behind last month's deadly suicide bombings at the JW Marriott and Ritz-Carlton hotels in Jakarta -- and uncovered a large bomb cache for future attacks. Police said they believe the deaths and five arrests unraveled a plan to blow up the private residence of Mr. Yudhoyono, who has made fighting terrorism a hallmark of his administration since coming to power in 2004.

Some experts on Sunday questioned whether police had killed Mr. Noordin, the self-proclaimed representative of al Qaeda in Southeast Asia.

Residents of Beji village in Java look at a bullet-riddled farmhouse on Sunday, a day after police ended a 17-hour siege on the suspected terrorist hideout.

The uncertainty surrounding the fate of Mr. Noordin, who has eluded capture several times, underscores how difficult it has been to stamp out terrorism in the world's largest Muslim-majority country, despite significant strides earlier in the decade.

Police Chief Bambang Hendarso Danuri declined to confirm Mr. Noordin's death Saturday afternoon, saying police would wait for DNA tests on the body, which should take about a week. Later, pictures began to circulate of the man shot dead in the bathroom of a farmhouse near Temanggung, a town in central Java, a province on Indonesia's main island where Mr. Noordin is believed to have spent most of the past six years on the run. Those pictures didn't look like Mr. Noordin, according to people who have seen them.

Sidney Jones, an expert on Indonesian terrorism with the International Crisis Group, a Brussels-based conflict-resolution body, said police were sure Mr. Noordin was in the farmhouse based on information from two people arrested on Friday in Temanggung, and had confirmed his death after the siege ended. But she now doubts they killed Mr. Noordin, citing the photographs.

If Mr. Noordin is not dead, it would be the latest in a number of near-miraculous escapes and could add to his stature among Indonesian jihadis. "I think he probably was in the house at some point," but may have escaped, Ms. Jones said.

Other intelligence sources continue to believe Mr. Noordin was in fact killed, and even if not, that other aspects of the weekend raids were successful enough to deal a major blow to the embattled network of terrorists in Indonesia. Authorities in recent years have made great strides in combating terrorism in Indonesia, a secular Muslim country of 240 million people, arresting hundreds of alleged militants, and Mr. Noordin's network is now believed to number only around 30 people.

The live television coverage of the police offensives captivated Indonesian audiences. Local news channel tvOne showed live pictures of black-clad antiterrorism police carefully entering the farmhouse near Temanggung after they had riddled the dwelling with a volley of shots and sent in robots to sweep for bombs.

Earlier, police had set off controlled explosions in the house, shaking the building and sending plumes of smoke into the sky. The tvOne news channel reported that a man inside the building at one point called out "I am Noordin M. Top." After the siege ended, ambulances arrived and men carried coffins into the ruined house while police shook hands and congratulated one another, television pictures showed.

At the other raid, before dawn on Saturday near Jakarta, the capital, police uncovered 1,000 pounds of bombs and a car specially modified to carry them. Police opened fire on the car that returned to the house before dawn, killing two people and leading to the arrest of three others. Local media reported that the men tried to hold out, throwing pipe bombs at the police. The car, which had fake plates, had been driven from central Java, police said.

Police said that the target of the bomb was Mr. Yudhoyono's private residence, located about three miles from the house, and that terrorists planned to hit the residence two weeks from now.

"I extend my highest gratitude and respect to the people for their brilliant achievement in this operation," Mr. Yudhoyono said on Saturday, the Associated Press reported.

Police also said the dwelling was used as a safe house by Mr. Noordin and his associates two days after the Jakarta hotel bombings last month. One of the men arrested had reserved a room in the JW Marriott that the terrorists used as their command center.

Police said one of the men killed at the house was Aher Setyawan, a terrorist involved in a 2004 truck bomb attack on the Australian embassy in Jakarta, which killed nine people including the suicide bomber. He was arrested in July 2004 before the embassy bombing but was released two months later, just after the attack, due to lack of evidence and didn't go to trial, according to Ms. Jones, the expert on Islamist groups in Indonesia.

Despite those successes, the ultimate value of the weekend's missions could hinge upon whether police really did bring down Mr. Noordin.

The 40-year-old former Malaysian accountant emerged as Asia's most wanted terrorist in recent years, especially after recent arrests of Islamic militants hobbled Jemaah Islamiyah, a Southeast Asian terrorist network linked to al Qaeda that was responsible for the 2002 nightclub bombings in Bali, which killed 202 mostly Western tourists.

After that, the senior leadership of Jemaah Islamiyah renounced violence and Mr. Noordin and some hard-core followers struck out alone. His hallmark has been to hit symbols of Western power. Last month's attack on the JW Marriott and Ritz-Carlton, which killed nine people including two suicide bombers, hit a breakfast business meeting of Western businessmen.

Existing photos of Mr. Noordin, believed to date from his 30s, show a well-groomed Malaysian man with a goatee and short dark hair. In other photos, he wears glasses and parts his hair down the middle. But he has also adopted a number of disguises, posing as an itinerant Muslim cleric, a beggar and a well-heeled businessman.

Police have at times been close on Mr. Noordin's tail. In October 2003, Indonesian police tracked Mr. Noordin to a building in the city of Bandung in west Java. When police raided the house, Mr. Noordin had vanished, leaving behind some tattered identification cards and six unexploded bombs.

Police came close again in September 2005, following his path to a safe house in Java before he escaped the search. Then, in November 2005, Indonesian police tracked Mr. Noordin and an associate to another safe house in central Java. His associate died in a hail of bullets after refusing to surrender, according to police officers at the scene, but only after Mr. Noordin had left. Mr. Noordin avoided the police yet another time in 2006 in a raid on a house in Wonosobo, a central Java town not far from Temanggung.

More recently, in June, police arrested a man in Cilacap, central Java, called Syaefuddin Zuhri, alias Sabit, who was believed to be a close associate of Mr. Noordin. That arrest came too late to stop the Jakarta hotel bombings the following month, which police believe were organized from Cilacap. But the detention gave police information they used to further their investigations.

Soon after the attacks, they raided an Islamic boarding school in the town run by Mr. Noordin's father-in-law and found explosives similar to an undetonated bomb in Room 1808 of the JW Marriott, which the bombers had used as a command center before the blasts. Police also arrested Mr. Noordin's wife in Cilacap.

Authorities then put a $100,000 bounty on Mr. Noordin. Early on Friday, their search led them to arrest two people in a market in Temanggung in connection with the hotel attacks. It was unclear what evidence drew the police to Temanggung, but questioning of the two arrested men led them to the farmhouse, which is owned by their uncle, an elderly Islamic school teacher.

Hundreds of police arrived at the farmhouse on Friday and began shooting at whomever was holed up inside at around 5 p.m. local time. The standoff lasted through the night with sporadic automatic gunfire and bomb explosions.

Around dawn on Saturday, a major explosion was heard in the house and later police snipers on a nearby wooded hill intensified their attack on the property, which is surrounded by rice paddies. After the siege ended, police cleared the house, bringing out the dead body that police and antiterrorism officials later said they believed to be Mr. Noordin.

Write to Tom Wright at tom.wright@wsj.com

Aug 9, 2009

Plot to Kill Indonesian President Foiled

MANILA — The police in Indonesia said Saturday that they had foiled plans by an Islamist group to assassinate President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, but they declined to confirm news reports that they had killed Southeast Asia’s most wanted terrorism suspect in a separate raid.

A leading expert on terrorism, Sidney Jones of the International Crisis Group, said she doubted local reports that the terrorism suspect, Noordin Muhammad Top, had been killed in a 16-hour raid on a militant hide-out outside Jakarta.

Police officials said that they could not immediately confirm whether the person who had been killed was Mr. Noordin, and that they had sent a body to Jakarta for DNA testing.

As confused and contradictory reports emerged, it remained unclear whether Mr. Noordin had been in the house at the time of the raid, whether he had escaped or whether he had possibly been arrested beforehand.

“What we do know is that the police intercepted this likely attack, and they get incredible kudos for that,” Ms. Jones said, referring to the assassination attempt.

But as to the raid on the house outside of Jakarta, she said, “What I’m pretty convinced of is that the person inside the house was not Noordin Top and the person who was killed was not Noordin Top.”

The National Police chief, Gen. Bambang Hendarso Danuri, tried to dampen the rumors.

“We could not yet disclose the identity of the killed man,” he said at a news conference. “After the DNA test, we will announce it, based on facts, not based on speculation.”

The two suspects killed in the second raid, in the West Java town of Bekasi, were believed to be linked to Mr. Noordin.

General Hendarso said an accomplice had told the police that two would-be suicide bombers were planning to detonate explosives in a truck at the president’s home this month. He said a truck was found rigged with explosives, along with bomb-making material.

He said the location was significant “because it is situated just a 12-minutes drive from the president’s residence.

“Our president was a target,” he said.

The president told reporters he had been briefed about a counterterrorism operation by the police, though he did not mention Mr. Noordin.

“I extend my highest gratitude and respect to the police for their brilliant achievement in this operation,” he said.

With the disarray and decline of the region’s leading Islamist terrorist group, Jemaah Islamiyah, Mr. Noordin had come to be seen as the region’s most dangerous militant, operating a splinter faction that claimed direct links to Al Qaeda, Ms. Jones said.

He is blamed for suicide bomb attacks last month on two hotels in Jakarta that killed seven people, ending a four-year pause in terrorist strikes in Indonesia.

“There is no question that he was involved with the bombings in Jakarta,” Ms. Jones said. “He is certainly the person who has masterminded every major attack in Indonesia beginning with the Marriott Hotel bombings in 2003.”

A Malaysian citizen, Mr. Noordin claimed in a video in 2005 to be Al Qaeda’s representative in Southeast Asia and said he was carrying out attacks on Western civilians to avenge Muslim deaths in Afghanistan.

Aug 8, 2009

Suspected Terrorists Killed in Indonesia

JAKARTA, Indonesia -- Antiterrorism police killed two alleged terrorists and arrested three others suspected of involvement in last month's deadly hotel bombs in Jakarta, a police spokesman said. The nighttime raid on a house near Jakarta uncovered more than 1,000 pounds of explosives, and a car fitted out for another terrorist attack, said Nanan Sukarna, the police spokesman.


indonesian police Reuters

Police in Indonesia's Central Java province stand guard while bystanders look on Friday, as authorities raid a house in search of suspected militants.

Meanwhile, a standoff with terrorists at a house near Temanggung, a town in central Java, a province on Indonesia's main island, which began at 5 p.m. local time on Friday continued on Saturday morning. Police say they believe inside the house was Noordin Mohamed Top, a Malaysian citizen who they say orchestrated the JW Marriott and Ritz-Carlton hotel bombings, which killed nine people, including the suicide bombers.

Mr. Sukarna said four people were inside the Central Java house, which is owned by a religious teacher in a local school. Two other people were arrested earlier Friday in the area, Mr. Sukarna said.

Mr. Noordin is wanted in connection with a number of terrorist attacks against Western targets in Indonesia in 2003 to 2005. Mr. Sukarna said the dwelling raided overnight near Jakarta was used by Mr. Noordin as a safe house two days after the hotel attacks.

Friday's possible breakthrough comes as Indonesians were showing their frustration over the failure of police to make a major arrest three weeks after the bombings.

Indonesia, a secular Muslim-majority nation, has done much to rein in terrorism in recent years, including arresting hundreds of militants. Few of the nation's 240 million people support militant Islam. The government needs to do more to monitor hard-line Islamic schools, which have given shelter to Mr. Noordin and members of his small network in recent years, experts say.

Although Mr. Noordin's terrorist group includes only about 30 or so individuals, the group can rely on a network of Islamists to help hide members, says Sidney Jones of the International Crisis Group, a Brussels-based conflict-resolution body.

—Yayu Yuniar contributed to this article.

Write to Tom Wright at tom.wright@wsj.com

Jul 30, 2009

Indonesian Terrorists Find Refuge

PALEMBANG, Indonesia -- The two Jakarta hotels hit by suicide bombers on July 17 reopened Wednesday amid tightened security as new evidence indicates terrorists avoided capture for years by relying on the shelter of sympathetic Islamists.

The twin bombings at the JW Marriott and Ritz-Carlton hotels killed six foreigners, an Indonesian waiter and the two suicide bombers. Police on Wednesday said they are taking seriously an online statement claiming responsibility for the bombings and bearing the name of the man suspected of planning the attack.

Terror Cell Busted

European Pressphoto Agency

A police officer delivered brochures showing Noordin Mohammad Top to students in Denpasar, Bali, Indonesia Wednesday. Indonesian authorities believe the Malaysian fugitive Noordin Mohammad Top was the mastermind behind the Marriott and Ritz Carlton hotel bombings in Jakarta on July 17.

The statement, which surfaced Wednesday and was posted Sunday on an Internet site that hosts blog posts, purports to be from "al Qaeda in Indonesia" and is signed with the name Noordin Mohamed Top. An Indonesian police spokesman said it was too early to tell whether the statement was authentic.

Many intelligence experts agree that terrorist networks in the world's most populous Muslim-majority nation are significantly weaker than a few years ago, before U.S.-trained Indonesian security forces ramped up efforts to wipe them out.

But the militants who have eluded capture are still able to rely on numerous havens -- often Islamic schools -- while they gather the fresh recruits and small amounts of money needed to mount more attacks on Indonesian soil.

Investigators have said they believe Mr. Noordin, a Malaysian believed to have carried out a number of terrorist attacks in Indonesia since 2003, orchestrated the bombings, and authorities have rounded up a number of his family members and associates in their bid to reel him in.

Mr. Noordin was formerly a key figure in Jemaah Islamiyah, the al Qaeda-linked Southeast Asian terrorist network whose members orchestrated bombings in Bali that killed more than 200 people in 2002.

After that, amid a major Indonesian police crackdown that netted hundreds of its members, the group's leadership renounced violence, leaving Mr. Noordin to forge links with smaller radical Islamic groups.

His new network's activities in and around Palembang, a sprawling city of 1.5 million people on the island of Sumatra, show how they operated.

The river port city is a melting pot of Malay, Indian and Chinese people, with a history as a pirate lair. Today, it's a dusty, traffic-clogged city known for its criminal gangs, and for the Masjid Agung, one of the nation's largest mosques, which fills up on Fridays when people from across the city come to pray.

In 2006, according to police documents, an emissary of Mr. Noordin known as Syaifuddin Zuhri, but who used the alias Sabit, arrived at a small Islamic school called al Furqon, about four hours' drive south of Palembang. His mission: To exhort a nonviolent study group of about 10 people concerned about Christian conversions of local Muslims to consider attacks on Western targets.

Mr. Sabit, who had fought in Afghanistan in the 1980s, knew the founder of the religious school, a Jemaah Islamiyah member and Afghan veteran called Ani Sugandi, and had helped him recruit hard-line teachers, according to police testimony viewed by The Wall Street Journal.

Mr. Sugandi later told police he had refused requests to join in the violence, but sheltered Mr. Sabit and allowed him to give a sermon to the group.

In the sermon, Mr. Sabit claimed he had direct links to Osama bin Laden and urged the members to launch a jihad against America and its allies, according to the testimony of Abdurrahman Taib, a leading member of the study group. The following year, Mr. Sabit told Mr. Taib that he had been sent by Mr. Noordin, the police files show.

Mr. Sabit introduced Mr. Taib to a master bomb maker, who later trained others in the group, and supplied him with a loaded revolver and 11 spare bullets to be used in attacks on "infidels," Mr. Taib said in trial testimony.

Members of the group went on, in 2007, to shoot dead a Christian schoolteacher in Palembang who had persuaded his Muslim female students not to wear their veils. The members also built bombs and planned to attack tourist cafes in a Sumatran hill resort popular with backpackers, according to testimony. The group called off the attacks at the last minute because they didn't want to also kill Indonesian Muslims.

[Indonesia Bombers]

When the group was broken up last year, after police followed leads from arrested Jemaah Islamiyah members, Those arrested included Mr. Sugandi, the head of the religious school -- which is now shuttered -- and a 35-year-old Singaporean known as Fajar Taslim, who had helped radicalize the group and was wanted in Singapore for a foiled attempt to attack Western targets there in 2001.

Six suspects picked up had no previous known connection to Jemaah Islamiyah or any other violent group, suggesting Mr. Noordin's network was able to successfully radicalize people.

Eight members of the group confessed and were convicted of the teacher's murder and of planning attacks, and received prison sentences of between 10 and 18 years. Mr. Sugandi was given a five-year sentence for harboring terrorists, and his school shut down. Mr. Sabit wasn't captured.

In Indonesia, a secular nation of 240 million people with thousands of moderate Islamist academies, there are about 50 radical Islamic schools opened by alleged members of Jemaah Islamiyah.

Sidney Jones, an expert on Southeast Asian terrorist networks at the Brussels-based International Crisis Group, a peace-advocacy body, says the school heads -- who want to see the establishment of an Islamic state and are highly distrustful of Indonesia's secular government and police -- often allow known terrorists to stay with them as long as they promise not to engage in acts of violence while there.

"You can be at any one of these schools and link in to Noordin" or his associates, says Ms. Jones, who first outlined the story of the Palembang group in a report last May.

The Indonesian government has hesitated to close the schools because of the difficulty of proving direct links to terrorism and the sensitivity about government interference in religious education, said a senior Indonesian antiterrorism official

Heri Purwanto, a 25-year-old who was in the Palembang study group and made a living hawking prepaid cards for mobile phones, was guarding the group's bombs in a derelict house in the city when police arrested him. His mother, Purwati, who lives in a run-down wooden house at the end of a narrow maze of alleys in a poor part of the city, contends her son was never a radical Muslim and is at a loss to explain his involvement.

Ms. Purwati says she complained to guards at her son's Jakarta prison that he was sharing a cell with Mr. Taslim, the Singaporean, and could become further radicalized.

Some members of the study group, who police have been unable to prove were involved in the attacks, have remained free. A lawyer for one of them, Oloan Martua Harahap, who owned an Internet cafe used by the group for meetings but claims not to be have known of the plans for the shooting or planned bombings, says those arrested had became more radical through contact with Mr. Sabit and others. "They were saying jihad must be conducted now and the enemy is Capitalism," says Bahrul Ilmi Yakup, the lawyer. .

Mr. Sabit was arrested in June in Cilacap, a town in Central Java where police now say they believe the Jakarta attacks were planned.

Just a few days before the bombings, police raided an Islamic school in Cilacap run by a man who is the father-in-law of Mr. Noordin and a relative of Mr. Sabit, uncovering bomb making material. The material was similar to an unexploded bomb found later at the JW Marriott. Authorities have since detained a woman believed to be Mr. Noordin's wife. Her father, who ran the school, and Mr. Noordin remain on the run.

Write to Tom Wright at tom.wright@wsj.com

Jul 24, 2009

Java's Ticking Time Bomb

Tom Allard, Cilacap, Central Java
July 25, 2009

HE WAS a mystery visitor dismissed by Jasmin, until last week, as a curious oddity. Every so often, a man would turn up at his next-door neighbour's house, walking briskly up to the front door. "He would always wear a motorcycle helmet all the way up to the entrance. He wouldn't take it off until he got inside," says Jasmin, a small-time farmer reclining on a bench on his front porch.

"The first time I saw him was just after Arina had her first child. I didn't think much of it, but when they found the bomb we were scared. When we heard our neighbour was a terrorist we were even more scared."

Arina Rahman is the suspected wife of Noordin Mohamad Top, the Malaysian-born terrorist who has had a leading role in suicide bombings in Indonesia stretching back to the first bombings that killed 202 people on Bali's Kuta tourist strip in 2002.

The man in the helmet was almost certainly Noordin himself, visiting the woman with whom he had two children while on the run from the biggest manhunt in Indonesian history.

For more than six years, Noordin has evaded capture. His remarkable elusiveness has, it appears, allowed him to pull off another of his signature devastating attacks.

He is the prime suspect as the mastermind of last week's audacious and meticulously planned bombings of two of Jakarta's most prestigious, and supposedly well-secured, luxury hotels.

Nine people, including the suicide bombers, died at the JW Marriott and Ritz-Carlton hotels. Among those murdered were a Dutch couple holidaying at the Ritz-Carlton, Evert Mokodompis, an Indonesian waiter whose wife gave birth to their son the day after he died, and three Australians and a New Zealander attending a breakfast meeting of Jakarta's business elite that was almost certainly targeted.

If all had gone to plan, the attacks would have caused far more carnage. Police now believe that an undetonated bomb, a laptop packed with explosives and bolts discovered in Room 1808 in the Marriott, was supposed to have gone off first, provoking a stampede of panicked guests towards the lobby, where the suicide bomber was to have then unleashed two bombs in the chaos.

The merciless killing of as many civilians as possible is the trademark of Noordin, an accountancy graduate who gravitated to a brand of violent Islamic extremism in Malaysia under the influence of the then exiled heads of Jemaah Islamiah, Indonesian clerics Abdullah Sungkar and Abu Bakar Bashir.

He fled to Indonesia in the wake of a crackdown on militants in Malaysia after the September 11 attacks.

He idolised Mukhlas, the now executed ringleader behind the first Bali bombings, and was infatuated with Osama bin Laden's jihad.

When Jemaah Islamiah's leadership, many of whom were appalled by the outcome of the first Bali bombing, decided to oppose mass-casualty attacks, Noordin struck out on his own and formed Tanzim Qaedat al-Jihad, also known as al-Qaeda for the Malay Archipelago.

"The extent of his actual communication with al-Qaeda is not clear, but he certainly seems infatuated, aping not only its name but also its materials and tactics," says Sidney Jones, the Jakarta-based terrorism analyst for the International Crisis Group.

The recently retired head of Indonesia's Detachment 88 counter-terrorism squad, Surya Darma, believes al-Qaeda was involved in last week's attacks, pointing to their sophistication, similarities with the hotel attacks in Mumbai and the requirement for significant financing.

"This kind of operation is not a domestic kind of work," Brigadier-General Darma told The Age. "This is al-Qaeda."

Whether al-Qaeda provided more than just an inspiration for the July 17 attacks remains to be seen. What is certain though, is that Indonesia has never quite seen terrorist attacks of this type before.

Most bombings in Indonesia have either focused on so-called soft targets such as Bali's bars or restaurants, with suicide bombers carrying bomb-laden packs, or used the brutal but somewhat ineffective strategy of hitting hard targets such as the Australian embassy with speeding car bombs.

In this case, the target was hard, the famously tightly secured hotels in Jakarta's upmarket business district, but the method was to use suicide bombers detonating themselves, which had, until last week, been used only for soft targets.

This was a surgical strike against foreigners and, specifically, Jakarta's elite expatriate community. The modus operandi meant that the terrorists could minimise the number of Muslim casualties and maximise the dead Westerners. Even militant Muslims baulk at the death of their fellow followers of Allah through terrorism.

Such an attack not only required recruits willing to kill themselves, but intimate knowledge of the hotel's security system. It needed intelligence on how to smuggle explosives past the metal detectors and about where and when the business meeting at which the Australians died was to be held, and an ability for the bombers to blend in with the guests at the five-star hotels.

It would have taken months of surveillance and the careful recruitment and placement of conspirators inside the hotel. In this case, it appears that a florist named Ibrahim, who had worked at the Ritz-Carlton for more than three years, was one of the insiders providing the valuable intelligence.

For Noordin — who constantly moves from one place to another, never staying anywhere for more than a few days — to have orchestrated the attacks while Indonesia's most wanted man was extraordinary.

"He must have nerves of steel to put up with it all … all the moving, all the close calls," says Greg Fealy, a former Office of National Assessments analyst now at the Australian National University. "But he endures it and he's continually planning new operations and putting together new cells."

While many Jemaah Islamiah members oppose his methods, they will still provide Noordin, reportedly a charismatic and persuasive man, with protection for a few days while he plans the next attack and opportunistically picks up new recruits as he travels.

In some cases he picks up mainstream Jemaah Islamiah members and persuades them to embrace terrorism. In another instance, he recruited individuals with a grievance against a local Christian minister converting Muslims and turned that sentiment into an all-embracing hatred of Westerners.

All the while, Noordin adheres to the strictest security arrangements. It is instructive that his wife, Arina, says she had no idea who he was, even though she was the daughter of one of his trusted operatives.

CERTAINLY, over a decade or more of jihadist activity of one type or another, Noordin has developed all the skills to put together an attack. He knows how to make bombs, source explosives, raise finances and persuade recruits to join his cause by using select passages of the Koran, arguing that Islam is under attack and must be defended at any cost and by any means.

And his ability to evade capture has enhanced his stature immeasurably.

As police investigate the mass murders at the hotels, it is in Cilacap, central Java, that they are concentrating much of their efforts. The residents of the district are hardly wealthy, but the web of villages connected by narrow roads and laneways, where locals tend rice paddies and small landholdings planted with cassava and shaded by coconut palms and banana trees, is a kind of lush Javanese rural idyll.

The homes are modest but well looked after, with many having neat hedges and patios adorned with bougainvillea. Very few women wear the hijab, and fewer still wear the chador or burqa favoured by Arina, Noordin's alleged wife.

It hardly feels like jihad central as school kids race their bikes and farmers take their produce to market.

Yet here, apparently, is Noordin's nest. Police have found a bomb identical to that used in the hotel blasts buried in the backyard of Arina's house in the village of Binangun. Her father, Baharudin, is on the run. A man alleged to have been a would-be suicide bomber trained by Noordin's group was picked up this week by police in Cilacap.

Saifuddin Zuhri, an Afghan jihad veteran and Noordin emissary who was arrested in Cilacap three weeks before the bombs went off, is believed to have been an important organiser in the long build-up to the attacks, making the seven-hour journey by train to Jakarta under the guise of having been given an all-expenses-paid scholarship to study Islam at a university there.

Jasmin, the neighbour, says Baharudin didn't interact with his neighbours. "He was at the house or the mosque. He didn't really talk with us at all, even though we have been neighbours for 20 years. We have really got to get rid of these people," he says. "They are very bad people if they did this terrorist bombing."

Jasmin's sentiments were widely shared in Cilacap, and reflect the broader sentiment across Indonesia about militant Islam.

In a country of 240 million people, it is a tiny minority of Indonesians who support mass-casualty terrorism, or are prepared to provide sanctuary for terrorists. Noordin's network of hardcore adherents is unlikely to be more than a few dozen people.

The broader JI movement that was so shockingly revealed by the first Bali bombings has all but ceased to exist, at least as a group that supports achieving an Islamic caliphate across South-East Asia by force of violence.

It has been crippled by arrests and fragmented by ideological disputes, and it is only Noordin's network that is considered to be an active exponent of terrorism, even if it continues to try to recruit from the old JI membership.

Even so, while 400 arrests of JI members shows Indonesia's success in cracking down on its terrorist wing, the fact that militant Islamic schools and preachers continue to go about their business unencumbered reveals a flaw in Indonesia's counter-terrorism strategy.

While they may not be pumping out suicide bombers and generally do not advocate the killing of civilians, they are producing graduates vulnerable to being taken the extra mile by recruiters such as Noordin.

More worryingly, members of the community seem to be prepared to provide sanctuary to mass murderers in the name of Islamic brotherhood, even if they don't approve of their actions. As Jakarta-based consultant James Van Zorge said this week: "Dangerous characters inside Jemaah Islamiah are treated with kid gloves, often with light jail sentences, and therefore given more opportunities to commit inhumane acts.

"At the same time, foreign nationals caught in minor violations of drug trafficking are left to rot in prison for the rest of their lives. Is vice a more heinous crime than cold-blooded murder?"

One of the most salient points about terrorists is perhaps the most obvious one, but one that is all too often ignored. Terrorist acts are conceived and executed to be brutal, shocking and inexplicable — in a word, terrifying — to convey an impression of a capability far greater than the actual power or support base of the organisation that undertakes them.

People are much more frightened by death that is sudden and violent than a demise that is more run-of-the-mill and less bloody. A tourist or visiting business person in Bali or Jakarta is still far more likely to meet misfortune through illness, a traffic accident or ordinary crime than to be caught up in a terrorist attack.

Yet given modern technology and relatively easy access to materials that can make bombs, it only requires 10 or so fanatics with a total lack of respect for human life and a preparedness to die to put together attacks such as those that occurred last week.

For Indonesia and its President, Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, the bombings could not have happened at a more heartbreaking moment.

Basking in international praise for peaceful elections held eight days earlier, the country was being lauded for its efforts to combat Islamic extremism and the fact there had not been an attack in four years.

Indonesia's efforts to unify its often fractious ethnic groups and to make headway against the pernicious problem of corruption have also been acclaimed of late.

Its economy, for so long a basket case, has been the best performing in the region, shrugging off the global economic crisis to be on track to record growth of about 4 per cent this year.

Tourism was booming in Bali, which had just been voted the "world's best island" by the upmarket Travel + Leisure magazine.

IF THE presidential election proved anything, it was that Islamic groups held much less sway over the masses than at previous polls.

Now Indonesia runs the risk of the newfound confidence in its future being reversed as investment dries up and tourists stay away.

In this context, it is perhaps understandable that Yudhoyono, relishing the opportunity to continue the steady reforms in his newly won second term, lost his cool and launched an astonishing rant hours after the attacks that all but blamed his political rivals for the hotel bombings, accusing them of being "draculas and angels of death" intent on "destroying the peace and security of the nation".

In the days since Yudhoyono's address to the nation, police investigations have shown those accusations to be as implausible as they originally seemed.

And it may also be that the intent of the terrorists to sow fear has not had the impact that they intended.

Jakartans have defiantly continued about their business, visiting the malls that are so often mentioned as targets.

Bookings at hotels have not been hit as hard as might be expected under the circumstances.

According to the chairman of the Bali Tourism Board, Ngurah Wijaya, the cancellation rates on the tourist island where two previous attacks have occurred have been "less than 1 per cent" over the past week.

"There will be some effect from the bombings, but we believe there will be other ways to make sure there is a minimal cost," said Wijaya. "Governor Made Pastika has called on all Bali citizens to be vigilant on security.

"We know we are still the best island in the world."

Such optimism may be well placed. Unless, that is, another terrorist attack soon follows.

Tom Allard is Indonesia correspondent.

Jul 23, 2009

Extremist Ideas Survive Crackdown in Indonesia

JAKARTA, Indonesia — The Indonesian government’s crackdown on militant Islamic groups has been widely praised in recent years, particularly by the United States. Proof of its success rested in the fact that, after annual terrorist attacks earlier this decade, none had taken place in nearly four years.

But as a clearer picture has begun emerging of Friday’s coordinated suicide bombings at the JW Marriott and Ritz-Carlton hotels here, terrorism experts and some Indonesian officials are focusing on what they describe as weaknesses in Indonesia’s antiterrorism campaign. Although the authorities have arrested hundreds of militants and severely weakened Jemaah Islamiyah, the Southeast Asian terrorist network, they have had much less success in uprooting the culture that breeds extremism.

The authorities have failed to aggressively check the radical clerics, Islamic schools or publishing houses that allow extremists to recruit and raise money for their operations, these experts said. Even moderate, politically powerful religious leaders, who are against violence, oppose any perceived government interference in their affairs. And as democracy has become entrenched since the fall of President Suharto a decade ago, the authorities have appeared hesitant to use tactics that may recall the era of military rule.

“The bombings should be a catalyst for Indonesia to develop a more comprehensive approach,” said Rohan Gunaratna, head of the International Center for Political Violence and Terrorism Research at Nanyang Technological University in Singapore. “They’ve been too focused on catching operators when they need to be tougher in actually preventing terrorism. They should take the boxing gloves off.”

The police have still not arrested anyone in the attacks, which killed seven people, including six foreigners, and wounded 50 more. On Wednesday, the police released sketches of two men suspected of being the suicide bombers and who were initially counted among the victims. Nanan Soekarna, a spokesman for the national police, said that DNA tests showed that the remains of neither of the suspected bombers matched a man named Nur Said, a militant whom the local news media had identified as one of the suicide bombers.

On Wednesday, investigators also detained a woman identified as Ariana Rahma, who is believed to be married to Noordin Muhammad Top, the prime suspect in the attacks, the local news outlets reported. She is said to be the daughter of the head of an Islamic boarding school in Cilacap, Central Java, that was raided last month. Investigators in that raid discovered bomb-making materials identical to those used Friday, the police have said.

The authorities have said that the bomb-making methods and the nature of the attacks indicated strongly that they were the work of Mr. Noordin, a Malaysian extremist who is believed to be behind the attacks earlier this decade. He was once a senior official in Jemaah Islamiyah and is the most wanted fugitive in Southeast Asia. Many extremist groups operating in Indonesia are said to have ties to him.

Though Mr. Noordin has evaded capture over the years, the Indonesian authorities have greatly disrupted Jemaah Islamiyah’s leadership. Once a network with operations throughout Southeast Asia, experts said, it now survives mostly in Indonesia in loosely affiliated small groups. The Indonesian government has also run a much-praised program in certain prisons that works to persuade Islamic militants to give up extremism.

But experts said that the authorities had been reluctant to rein in clerics and schools that had allowed extremists like Mr. Noordin to continue operating.

“On the law enforcement side, the achievements have been certifiable,” said Sidney Jones, an expert on Islamic terrorism at the International Crisis Group’s branch here in Jakarta. But Ms. Jones said that with an estimated 50 schools with ties to Jemaah Islamiyah, fugitives were sheltered, new recruits were found and money was raised.

“These places remain nodes of communication that are critical to keeping the network alive,” she said. “Everybody knows where these schools are, but there’s been a sensitivity in dealing with them because people don’t want to see Islamic education stigmatized.”

Islamic schools, called “pesantrens” here, have long played a central role in many Indonesian communities. Only a few are said to espouse violent tactics. But the schools, which are politically powerful, have long resisted greater government scrutiny.

“It would be very difficult to start questioning ulamas from these schools,” said a senior Indonesian counterterrorism official, referring to Islamic scholars at the schools and speaking on the condition of anonymity because he was not allowed to speak to the media. “Even moderate Indonesians would react negatively against that.”

The official said that sensitivity about carrying out any measure with a tinge of the pre-democratic Suharto era also complicated investigators’ activities. While permits were needed to publish books in the past, publishers of radical ideology are now flourishing in Indonesia and account for the biggest source of such thought in Southeast Asia.

“Since democratization, we’ve been in a conundrum,” the official said. “Do we start banning books?

“We’re conscious that we have not eradicated the deeper problems in the last five years,” the official added.

Mr. Gunaratna, of Nanyang Technological University, said Indonesia needed to adopt tougher antiterrorism laws, like those in Singapore and Malaysia, which allow suspects to be detained and questioned longer without bringing charges.

“That’s the reason there has been no attack inside Singapore or Malaysia,” he said. “Since democratization, some members of the Indonesian elite have the misguided view that these measures are antidemocratic.”

Jul 20, 2009

Jakarta Blasts Renew Security Fears

JAKARTA -- The explosions that ripped through Jakarta's JW Marriott and Ritz Carlton hotels on Friday raised new concerns about the growing sophistication of terrorists in Asia and the possibility that suicide bombers may have been purposefully targeting a meeting of largely Western businessmen.

Police are still investigating the nearly simultaneous suicide attacks, which killed nine people and injured 53 others after the bombers apparently smuggled bomb parts into the hotel disguised as laptops. Although police haven't officially named any suspects, intelligence experts, analysts and investigators say that Noordin Mohammad Top, a 40-year-old member of the al- Qaeda-backed Jemaah Islamiyah network, or terrorists linked to him, are now the leading suspects in masterminding the attacks.

The Associated Press Sunday cited reports that the Indonesian government was intensifying efforts to find Mr. Noordin and had enlisted help from authorities in Malaysia, where Mr. Noordin lived until earlier this decade.

The attack had many of the hallmarks of a Jemaah Islamiyah operation, analysts said, and Indonesian police said an undetonated bomb found in room 1808 of the JW Marriott -- which police believe the bombers used as their base -- was almost identical to a cache of bombs found recently at a house owned by Mr. Noordin's father-in-law in Cilacap, central Java. The Marriott room was booked under the name Nurdin Azis, which is similar to aliases Mr. Noordin has used in the past.

The unexploded bomb showed "strong indications" that Mr. Noordin or terrorist cells linked to him were involved in Friday's events, said Ansyaad Mbai, head of counterterrorism at Indonesia's Coordinating Ministry for Political and Security Affairs, in an interview on Saturday. "The bomb in the Marriott was similar to ones we found in Cilacap," he said.

Indonesian police have yet to identify the perpetrators of the blasts at two Jakarta hotels, but police said Monday the regional militant group Jemaah Islamiah could be behind the attacks. Video courtesy of Reuters.

Attempts to identify the two suicide bombers, who were among the nine dead, were continuing, with police believing at least one of them was Indonesian. Both of their bodies were decapitated in the blasts, making it difficult to verify their identities.

Whatever the investigation reveals, the terrorists' success in smuggling bomb parts into the JW Marriott underscores their growing ability to beat tactics employed by security experts in recent years to keep them at bay. Because of past bouts with terrorism in Indonesia, including bombings in Bali in 2002 that killed more than 200 people, major Jakarta hotels have some of the tightest security in the world, with airport-style metal detectors and heavily guarded driveways with roadblocks.

The bombers appeared to have no trouble getting past those security measures, though, smuggling bomb parts into the hotel disguised as laptops, police said. The ability to assemble bombs inside hotels is "definitely a step up in their tactics," said Paul Quaglia, an analyst in Bangkok at PSA Asia, a security consulting company that has done an audit for the Ritz Carlton in Jakarta. "It's definitely something that was well planned."

Fears were also rising that the bombers were targeting elite businessmen specifically. Noke Kiroyan, an Indonesian citizen and former local chairman of mining company Rio Tinto PLC, was one of 19 executives breakfasting in a small lounge in the JW Marriott, which a local consulting group hires each Friday for its meetings. Mr. Kiroyan, who lost part of his right ear in the attack, said he believes that the bomber who hit the hotel would have chosen the main restaurant on the other side of the JW Marriott's lobby, where most guests were breakfasting and which was the target of a 2003 attack on the same hotel, if they had wanted to inflict the maximum number of casualties. "I think we were targeted," he said.

Other Western executives in Jakarta repeated concerns over the possible targeting of business elites, which they said may lead foreign businesses to be more cautious about how they operate in Indonesia and possibly recalibrate expansion plans. In recent years, Indonesia has made strides in arresting terrorists, making Westerners feel more secure. ExxonMobil Corp. and other foreign resource companies had recently planned to increase the number of expatriate staff in Indonesia.

Just before the blast, early Friday morning, the hotel's closed-circuit television caught images of the suicide bomber, wearing a backpack on his chest and wheeling a suitcase, turning left in the lobby and walking purposefully toward the lounge.

The bomber was challenged by a hotel security guard as he approached the room but was waved through after saying he was delivering a package to his boss, local media reported. Moments later, while at the entrance of the lounge, which was cordoned off with rope, he detonated his bomb, which police said was packed with nails.

Mr. Kiroyan was sitting at a conference table with his back to the lounge's entrance and was partly shielded by a pillar. The last thing Mr. Kiroyan remembers before the blast is reading a long message from his wife on his mobile phone. "Suddenly there was a loud bang and a blinding flash," he said. "My first thought was that my mobile phone exploded. You hear stories about mobile phones exploding. But then I realized it couldn't be that."

Suddenly, Mr. Kiroyan was lying on the floor in pitch darkness with his clothes soaking wet. What he at first took to be blood turned out to be water from the hotel's emergency sprinkler system. People were crying out that they couldn't see.

Mr. Kiroyan then made his way out of the room, where he was met by two hotel staff and guided outside to wait for an ambulance. "I feel angry but relieved that I am alive," Mr. Kiroyan said.

Although he didn't directly observe the suicide bomber, Mr. Kiroyan said other colleagues at the meeting later recounted that some of the people in the room remember seeing an unknown Indonesian man at the entrance just before the explosion.

The four foreigners who have so far died in the Marriott explosion -- three Australians and a New Zealander -- were all sitting at the far end of table from Kiroyan, nearest the entrance. An Indonesian waiter and the suicide bomber also were killed in the explosion.

Indonesian terrorists have failed in recent years to kill a large number of Westerners in suicide bombings. The 2002 Bali nightclub attacks killed 202 mainly Western tourists through two bombs, one in a car and the other carried in a backpack by a suicide bomber. But an earlier attack on the JW Marriott in Jakarta in 2003, by a car bomb, killed 12 people, two-thirds of them Indonesians, and injured more than a hundred. Attacks against the Australian embassy in 2004 and again in Bali in 2005, killed mainly Indonesians.

Foreign expatriates living in Jakarta said none of the previous attacks so directly targeted foreign business interests. The idea that the meeting Friday may have been a focus was "a scary thought" said William Reed Rising, a U.S. citizen who works in real estate and normally attends the briefing but was absent last week.

—Patrick Barta contributed to this article.

Write to Tom Wright at tom.wright@wsj.com

Jul 19, 2009

Indonesian Police Say Jakarta Bombings Are Work of Jemaah Islamiyah



19 July 2009

Indonesian Police say the bombings of two hotels in Jakarta on Friday was the work of Jemaah Islamiyah, a terrorist group with al-Qaida ties. Analysts say it is likely that Noordin Top, a Malaysian fugitive who leads an affiliated group within a Southeast Asian militant network, planned and organized the attacks. The two blasts killed nine people, including the two suspected attackers, and wounded 50, many of them foreigners.

Indonesian national police spokesman Nanan Soekarna says the bombing attacks on the Marriott and Ritz Carlton Hotels in Jakarta on Friday were the work of Jemaah Islamiyah. The group with ties to Al-Qaida, has carried out dozens of bombings in Indonesia in the past decade, including a 2002 attack in Bali that left more than 200 people dead, mostly foreign tourists.

A poster bearing image of Southeast Asia terror ringleaders Noordin M. Top, left, and Azhari bin Husin is put on a tree in Jakarta (File)
A poster bearing image of Southeast Asia terror ringleaders Noordin M. Top, left, and Azhari bin Husin is put on a tree in Jakarta (File)
He told reporters Sunday an unexploded bomb left in a guest room of the Marriott hotel, which was attacked along with the nearby Ritz-Carlton, resembled explosives used in Bali and one discovered in a recent raid on an Islamic boarding school.

Sidney Jones, an analyst with the International Crisis Group, says Noordin Top, a Malaysian who leads the most militant faction of Jemaah Islamiyah, is the likely organizer of the attacks.

"Noordin is the only person of the various leaders of radical groups in Indonesia who is continued to be determined to attack western targets and particularly American targets," said Jones.

Jones says Noordin has used suicide bombers in the past like the ones used in Friday's attacks. And she says before the bombing police had some intelligence indicating Noordin may have been planning something.

"It was clear in the last two weeks that something was afoot. And the police were very actively searching this area in South Central Java called Cilacap because they believe some of Noordin's associates were active there," said Jones. "And we now know there is linkage between explosive materials used in these hotel bombings with some of the materials found in Cilacap by police."

But Jones says Noordin Top may have split from the main Jemaah Islamiyah organization, or JI, which had recently turned away from violence because it was turning public opinion against them.

"The bulk of JI members are not interested in violence now because they regard this kind of bombing as counter-productive," added Jones. "They need to rebuild their organization and they do that by recruiting new members through religious outreach. This kind of bombing does not bring you any new members, it creates outrage in the community."

Jones says bombing the Marriott Hotel, which was also attacked in 2003, was probably meant to demonstrate that their group is still active and able penetrate the increased security.