INDONESIA - Counter-terrorism police here have arrested dozens of people from groups linked to Al-Qaeda and Islamic State over suspected plots targeting next year’s presidential election, an official said.
Police
arrested the 59 suspects earlier in October and seized weapons, propaganda
material and bomb-making chemicals, a spokesman for Indonesia’s anti-terrorism
unit Densus 88 said.
The
40 suspects arrested from IS-linked Jamaah Ansharut Daulah (JAD) were planning
an attack on the presidential elections due to be held in February, spokesman
Aswin Siregar said at a press conference in capital Jakarta.
“For
them, the election is part of democracy, whereby democracy is immoral.
Democracy is something that violates the law for them,” he said. “They planned
to carry out attacks on security forces who focus on securing the series of
election activities.”
Another
19 suspects were linked to the Jemaah Islamiyah network, which has ties to
Al-Qaeda, Siregar said. “I think this served as a warning for them that Densus
88 would not tolerate the slightest threat to our domestic security, especially
in the situation leading up to... the election,” he added.
Jemaah
Islamiyah was behind the 2002 Bali bombings that ripped through a nightclub and
bar on the Indonesian resort island, killing 202 people including 88
Australians. The attacks were the deadliest in Indonesian history and led to a
crackdown on militancy in the country.
Some
have called for the implementation of shariah law in Indonesia, which
officially recognises five religions in addition to Islam.
Members
of JAD have staged other attacks, including a series of suicide bombings in May
2018 against several churches and a police headquarters in Surabaya,
Indonesia’s second-biggest city. (The Star, AFP)
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