Monday, 18 January 2016

12 arrested after deadly Jakarta attack


Story highlights

  •  Death toll rises to four as victim succumbs to injuries in the hospital
  • Police: Among 12 arrested, one received money transfer from alleged mastermind
  • The attack opened Thursday morning with a suicide explosion near a Starbucks
Jakarta, Indonesia (CNN)The death toll from last week's terror attack in Indonesia's capital has risen to four, after a victim died in the hospital from his injuries, Jakarta police spokesman Mohammad Iqbal announced Sunday.
At least 25 other people were wounded Thursday when a suicide bomber and gunmen launched an attack near a Starbucks coffee shop, police said.
Four attackers were also killed, following the bombing and a firefight with police.
Among the 12 suspects subsequently rounded up in various Indonesian provinces, one is suspected to have received a money transfer from the alleged mastermind, Bahrun Naim, an Indonesian militant who authorities believed conducted the operation from ISIS' headquarters in Syria, national Police Chief Badrodin Haiti said.
ISIS launches another coordinated attack in a major city
ISIS launches another coordinated attack in a major city 02:18
The transfer helped finance Thursday's attack, the police chief said.
    Police still are on high alert, Haiti said, in part because authorities have intercepted encoded messages about a possible attack. Further details about the threat weren't immediately available.

    Deadly new threat

    Indonesian authorities accuse Naim of leading a Southeast Asian branch of ISIS called Katibah Nusantara. "His vision is to unite all ISIS-supporting elements in Southeast Asia," Inspector-General Tito Karnavian, Jakarta's ranking police officer, told CNN. Hundreds of Indonesians are believed to have traveled to ISIS-held territory in the Middle East, including its de facto capital, Raqqa, Syria.
    Indonesia, the world's most populous Muslim country, has long battled violent extremism, such as the 2002 and 2005 bombings in Bali, but police say this new generation is more dangerous, because ISIS' ideology views Muslims as legitimate targets.
    Harits Abu Ulya, an expert on militant Islam and a former commander in the militant group Hizbuh Tahrir, told CNN that he mentored his "little brother" Naim and stayed in contact with him long after the younger man went to Syria. He says that Naim has become an "inspiring figure" for ISIS-supporting youth in Indonesia.

    Defiance on the streets

    Jakartans sent a powerful message to would-be attackers Sunday, taking to the streets for their usual Sunday carnival, with residents gathering in major thoroughfares, which are typically closed to traffic for several hours each week.
    Thousands of people walked, jogged, cycled, roller-bladed and performed music down the city's main boulevard, with families celebrating the open roads just a few yards away from where the militants carried out their brazen daylight terror attack.
    In a burst of patriotism and defiance, Indonesians say they are determined to show the terrorists "we are not afraid."

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