JI has 300-man attack force
JI has 300-man attack force
Agencies
Jakarta/Bangkok/Sydney, Australia
The Southeast Asian Jamaah Islamiyah (JI) militant group has at
least 300 fighters trained in the Philippines and Afghanistan, a
senior Indonesian police officer said on Thursday.
The leader of the group, linked to Osama bin Laden's al-Qaeda
and suspected of involvement in a string of attacks including
last year's Bali bomb blasts, was arrested in Thailand last week.
"According to our count it would be 300, but it could be more
than that," National Police Detectives chief Comr. Gen. Erwin
Mappaseng told a media conference when asked about the Jamaah
Islamiyah's strength.
The 300 had been trained in Afghanistan and the southern
Philippines, Erwin said. Moro guerrillas have been battling
government forces in the south of the mostly Christian
Philippines for decades.
"They're competent in war tactics including the use of bombs
and explosives," he said.
He said the squad also has a smaller elite group but denied
that a "suicide squad" exists in JI.
"It does not exist. No suicide squads have been mentioned (by
police)," the detective chief said.
The Bali bombings were suicide attacks. A suicide bomber is
also suspected in the blast at the JW Marriott Hotel on Aug. 5
which took 12 lives but police have not confirmed this.
The JI wants to set up an Islamic state across much of
Southeast Asia.
He showed reporters a photograph of a man with a moustache,
saying it was the latest picture of the JI leader known as
Hambali, who was Southeast Asia's most wanted man until he was
captured in a Thai town last week with two accomplices in a Thai-
U.S. operation. He is in U.S. custody.
Hambali was implicated in 39 bombings in eight Indonesian
cities between August 2000 and the Bali blasts in October 2002,
Erwin said on Thursday.
Erwin said Indonesia is "very much interested" in questioning
Hambali, who was arrested in Thailand last week and is in U.S.
custody at an undisclosed location.
In Manila, Philippines' Foreign Undersecretary Franklin
Ebdalin said on Thursday Hambali should stand trial in the
Philippines for plotting a train bombing that left 22 dead in
December 2000.
Manila has sent a formal request for the U.S. government to be
allowed access to the Indonesian militant, also known as Riduan
Isamuddin.
In another development, The Australian newspaper reported on
Thursday Hambali has denied reports he planned to bomb a 21-
nation Asia-Pacific summit in Bangkok to be attended by U.S.
President George W. Bush.
The paper, quoting an Asian intelligence officer who has
questioned Hambali since his capture in Thailand last week, said
the militant was plotting instead to bomb foreign embassies and
other targets in Bangkok.
Thai officials earlier said Hambali had been planning an
attack on the October summit meeting of the Asia Pacific Economic
Cooperation group, APEC.
Separately, The Nation newspaper reported on Thursday a series
of lucky breaks led to the capture of Hambali including the
discovery of an apartment key in the pocket of a close aide
arrested earlier.
The Nation report could not be independently verified. The
English-language daily was the first to report Hambali's arrest
on Aug. 15, and has been covering the investigation closely.
The Nation said Thai security forces were not even looking for
Hambali. But the trail to Hambali was exposed after Thai security
forces arrested a Malaysian national suspected of being an al-
Qaeda associate or sympathizer, it said, quoting an unidentified
security source.
"He was a small potato," the source said.