Indonesian suicide bomber leaves note criticising new criminal code
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[December 07, 2022]
BANDUNG, Indonesia (Reuters) -A suspected Islamist
militant, angered by Indonesia's new criminal code, killed one other
person and wounded at least 10 in a suicide bomb attack at a police
station in the city of Bandung on Wednesday, authorities said.
The suicide bomber was believed to be affiliated with the Islamic
State-inspired group Jamaah Ansharut Daulah (JAD) and had previously
been jailed on terrorism charges, Indonesian police chief Listyo Sigit
Prabowo told a news conference.
The police chief said the attacker, identified as Agus Sujatno, was
released in late 2021 and investigators had found dozens of documents
protesting the country's controversial new criminal code at the crime
scene.
"We found dozens of papers protesting the newly ratified criminal code,"
he said.
Though there are sharia-based provisions in the new criminal code
ratified by parliament on Tuesday, Islamist hardliners could have been
angered by other articles that could be used to crackdown on the
propagation of extremist ideologies, analysts say.
West Java police chief Suntana earlier told Metro TV that authorities
had found a blue motorbike at the scene, which they believed was used by
the attacker.
Attached to the bike was a note carrying a message decrying the new
criminal code as "an infidel product," Suntana said.
Todd Elliott, a senior security analyst at Concord Consulting in
Jakarta, said it was likely the attack had been planned for some time
and was an ideological rejection of the country's new laws.
"While all the attention is on some of these sharia-based provisions in
the criminal code and how that is an indication of the spread of
conservative Islam in Indonesia, there are also changes in the criminal
code that hardliners would not support," he said.
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Indonesia Automatic Fingerprint
Identification System (INAFIS) officers investigate following a
blast at a district police station, that according to authorities
was a suspected suicide bombing, in Bandung, West Java province,
Indonesia, December 7, 2022. REUTERS/Willy Kurniawan
"Including outlawing any ideology that goes against the state
ideology, Pancasila, and that would also include extremist
ideology."
Video footage from the scene of Wednesday's attack showed smoke
rising from the damaged police station, with debris n the ground.
"Suddenly I heard the sound of an explosion... I saw a few police
officers come out from the station and they couldn't walk properly,"
Hanes, a 21-year-old street vendor who witnessed the explosion told
Reuters.
Islamist militants have in recent years carried out attacks in the
world's largest Muslim-majority nation, including at churches,
police stations and venues frequented by foreigners.
Members of JAD were responsible for a series of suicide church
bombings in the city of Surabaya in 2018. Those attacks were
perpetrated by three families, who also attached suicide vests to
their young children, and killed at least 30 people.
In 2021, a pair of JAD newlyweds carried out a suicide bomb attack
at a cathedral in Makassar, killing only themselves.
In an effort to crack down on militants, Indonesia created a tough
new anti-terrorism law after suicide bombings linked to JAD.
The group, which is now largely splintered, has been significantly
weakened by a wave of arrests by the counterterrorism agency in
recent years, analysts say.
(Reporting by Ananda Teresia, Fransiska Nangoy, Stefanno Sulaiman,
Yuddy Cahya Budiman and Kate Lamb; Writing by Kate Lamb; Editing by
Ed Davies, Gerry Doyle & Simon Cameron-Moore)
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