AhlulBayt News Agency

source : AFP
Monday

27 February 2017

4:26:36 PM
814525

ISIS-linked Indonesian shot dead after bomb attack

Indonesian police shot dead a man linked to ISIS group during a firefight at a government office Monday after a small bomb was set off nearby.

(AhlulBayt News Agency) - Indonesian police shot dead a man linked to ISIS group during a firefight at a government office Monday after a small bomb was set off nearby.

No one apart from the attacker was hurt in the incident in the city of Bandung on Java island, which started with a pressure cooker bomb exploding in a park before the gun battle erupted in the office opposite.

Police said the attacker was a former terror convict from a ISIS-supporting network called Jamaah Ansharut Daulah (JAD), which has been blamed for a series of recent attacks in the Muslim-majority country including an assault in Jakarta last year.

After the blast at about 8:30am (0130 GMT), the attacker fled into a building belonging to local authorities opposite the park and set it ablaze.

Police exchanged fire during an hour-long stand-off with the man. He was shot in the stomach and died later in hospital.

Everyone was evacuated from the building unhurt. Police seized guns and two backpacks carried by the attacker but did not say what they contained.

National police chief Tito Karnavian said the attacker belonged to Jamaah Ansharut Daulah (JAD) and had demanded that authorities release his associates from prison.

Indonesian security forces have arrested hundreds of militants during a sustained crackdown in recent years.

“He belongs to the group JAD — it is a main supporter of ISIS ,” Karnavian told reporters. “He asked for his friends to be released from prison.”

He said the attacker, whom he did not name, had been jailed over his involvement with militant training in Jantho in Aceh province. Jantho was the location of a notorious extremist training camp, which was closed down by authorities in 2010.

Last month the United States designated JAD a terrorist organisation, saying the network was an umbrella group for about two dozen Indonesian extremist outfits.

Last year’s gun and suicide attack in the capital left four attackers and four civilians dead, and was the first assault claimed by ISIS in Southeast Asia.

JAD has also been blamed for a firebomb attack on a church that killed a toddler and a foiled plan to launch a Christmas-time suicide bombing.

Many recent ISIS-linked plots in Indonesia have been botched or foiled, with analysts saying that many of the country’s militants lack the capacity to launch serious attacks.

Indonesia suffered a series of attacks in the past 15 years, including the 2002 Bali bombings that killed 202 people, mostly foreign tourists.



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