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Monday 14 May 2018 - 07:58

Indonesia hit by new deadly explosions after Daesh church bombings

Story Code : 724574
Firefighters trying to extinguish a fire after a blast outside the Center Pentecostal Church in Surabaya on May 13, 2018. (AFP)
Firefighters trying to extinguish a fire after a blast outside the Center Pentecostal Church in Surabaya on May 13, 2018. (AFP)

The explosions took place at a checkpoint outside the building on Monday morning, leaving at least 14 people, including four police officers and six civilians, killed, police said.
Police spokesman Frans Barung Mangera explained that “there were four perpetrators riding two motorcycles who have been confirmed dead, their identity is still being verified,” adding, “A child who was with them, an eight-year-old girl... has been taken to the hospital.”
​Indonesian Police Chief Tito Karnavian later told a news conference that the bombers were members of the same family.

Earlier in the day, three people were also killed when a bomb prematurely went off in an apartment in the East Java city of Sidoarjo. Police said those killed were perpetrators.
The Monday incidents follow a string of horrific deadly attacks, which were carried out by a family of six  against three churches a day earlier.
The fatalities from the attacks, which were claimed by the Daesh terror group, reached 14 overnight. More than 40 people were also wounded.

How did the family bomb churches?
Karnavian said the family, which included two girls, aged 9 and 12 years old, and two teenage boys, belonged to a local Daesh- affiliated network, known as Jemaah Ansharut Daulah (JAD).
According to police investigation, the father, identified as the JAD head Dita Oepriarto, dropped off his wife, Puji Kuswat ,and two daughters at the Santa Maria Catholic Church, where the three blew themselves up on Sunday morning.
Citing a security guard, the Associated Press said the woman had arrived at the church carrying two bags, and forced her way inside, ignoring the guards.
“Suddenly, she hugged a civilian, then [the bomb] exploded,” said the eyewitness.
Minutes later, Oepriarto, who was driving an explosive-laden van, arrived into the grounds of Surabaya Centre Pentecostal Church, and detonated the vehicle. The sons also hit another church. 

According to the police chief, the family was among hundreds of those that had recently returned from Syria, where the Daesh terror group first emerged in 2014 before losing all the territory it had captured some three years later.
President Joko Widodo, who visited the scene of one of the attacks, said the “cowardly actions” of the attackers were “very barbaric and beyond the limit of humanity.”
He had also ordered police to “look into and break up networks of perpetrators.”

Iran offers sympathy to Indonesia
Iranian Foreign Ministry Spokesman Bahram Qassemi condemned the brutal terror attacks, offering sympathy to the Indonesian government and nation as well as the families of the victims.

He called further for efforts by regional states and the entire international community to address the root causes of such inhumane acts of violence in the region..
The sole way to prevent such terror attacks, Qassemi added, is for all countries to stand united and take serious measures against terrorism without any double standards.
Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim country, has long struggled with domestic terrorist groups, including the al-Qaeda- affiliated group Jemaah Islamiyah, which carried out more than 10 attacks between 2000 and 2010.
It has also been recently confronting Daesh that has been recruiting militants in the country after its collapse in the Middle East.
Last year, two bombers attacked a bus station in the capital, Jakarta, killing at least three police officers. Police suspected Daesh involvement.
In 2016, the local JAD cell, launched several deadly attacks, including the one in January that targeted a Starbucks café, in the capital Jakarta, killing four people.
It was the first attack claimed by Daesh in Southeast Asia.
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