Widodo urges calm after Jakarta suicide attacks
JAKARTA - Indonesia's president urged people to remain calm on Thursday, a day after suspected suicide bombers killed three police officers at a Jakarta bus terminal in attacks that authorities believe are highly likely to be linked to the Islamic State group.
Six police officers and six civilians were also wounded in the twin blasts that were detonated five minutes apart by the two suspected attackers in the Indonesian capital on Wednesday night, police said.
The attacks were the deadliest in Indonesia since January last year, when eight people were killed, four of them attackers, after suicide bombers and gunmen attacked the capital.
"We must continue to keep calm (and) keep cool. Because. ... We Muslims are preparing to enter the month of Ramadan for fasting," President Joko Widodo said in a statement.
Authorities in the world's biggest Muslim-majority nation are increasingly worried about a surge in radicalism, driven in part by a new generation of militants inspired by the IS.
It was "highly likely" an IS-linked group was behind Wednesday's attacks, National Police spokesman Awi Setyono said. "There's a link, but we're still studying whether it's an international network," Setyono said.
Setyono said that police were investigating whether the attackers had direct orders from Syria or elsewhere.
Police have not yet named the two dead suspects but a law enforcement source, who spoke on condition of anonymity, said they may have been linked to Jemaah Ansharut Daulah, an umbrella organization on a US State Department "terrorist" list that is estimated to have drawn hundreds of IS sympathizers in Indonesia.
Indonesia has suffered a series of mostly low-level attacks by IS sympathizers in the past 17 months.
Residents helped clean up debris at the bus terminal in East Jakarta on Thursday, where splattered blood stains and broken glass remained after the attacks.
"After what happened in Manchester, in Marawi in the Philippines, maybe the cells here were triggered by the bombs and that lifted their passion to start bombing again," Setyono told television station TVOne.
While most recent attacks in Indonesia have been poorly organized, authorities believe about 400 Indonesians have joined the IS group in Syria and could pose a more lethal threat if they come home.
Police said Wednesday's attackers had used pressure cookers packed with explosives.
A similar type of bomb was used by a lone attacker in the Indonesian city of Bandung in February. Authorities suspect the attacker, killed by police, had links to a radical network sympathetic to Islamic State.
Reuters - Xinhua
(China Daily 05/26/2017 page11)