Indonesia Arrests JI-Linked Singaporeans - Police
JAKARTA (AFP)--Five Singaporeans and an Indonesian allegedly linked to key
militants of the Jemaah Islamiyah, or JI, regional jihadi network have been
arrested in Indonesia, police said Monday.
The suspects, five of whom are related, were arrested in a series of raids
across Indonesia in the space of a week, national police criminal investigations
chief Susno Duadji told reporters.
"One Indonesian was arrested in (the Central Javanese town of) Cilacap on
suspicion of terrorist acts. He's linked to the Palembang group," Duadji said,
referring to a JI cell on Sumatra island behind the murder of a Christian
teacher and a plot to blow up a tourist cafe.
Two of the arrested Singaporeans were connected to the cell's leader,
Singaporean Mohammad Hasan bin Saynudin, and top militant Mas Selamat bin
Kastari, Duadji said.
Kastari, the alleged head of JI's Singapore wing, was captured in Malaysia in
May more than a year after dramatically escaping from a detention center in the
city state.
He is alleged to have plotted to hijack an airliner in Bangkok and crash it
into Singapore's Changi airport - one of Asia's busiest - in 2001 following the
Sept. 11 attacks in the U.S.
"The Singaporeans were arrested on suspicion of forging identification
documents, breaking immigration rules and giving false information. They made
identity cards as Indonesians when they were not. That's forgery," Duadji said.
Duadji said Indonesian and Singaporean police had worked together in the
arrests.
"It is the foreign ministry's responsibility whether to deport or extradite (
the Singaporeans)," he said.
JI has been blamed for a series of attacks on non-Muslims and Westerners in
Indonesia, including 2002 and 2005 bombings on the Hindu holiday island of Bali
that killed over 200 people.
There have been no major bombings in Indonesia since 2005 due to a police
crackdown and internal divisions within JI.
(END) Dow Jones Newswires
06-29-090614ET
Copyright (c) 2009 Dow Jones & Company, Inc.
|