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Bali bombers' videos recovered at Azahari's HQ
Three suicide bombers who killed 20 people in restaurants on Indonesia's Bali last month made videos in which they condemned the United States and said they were ready to die, the national police chief said on Friday.

The videos were seized this week as part of raids in which one of Asia's top Islamic militants, Azahari Husin, was killed. It is the first time police have said Indonesian bombers have appeared on tapes ahead of blasts, a practice more common among suicide attackers in the Middle East.

General Sutanto said the bombers were seated and unarmed when they spoke in a mixture of Indonesian and Arabic. Among a total of four tapes, there were instructions on how to assemble bombs and plans for the October 1 Bali restaurant attacks, he said.

"There was a taped video of the three bombers before they carried out their suicide (mission), talking about their belief, arguing it's permissible to attack targets deemed as obstructing injustice," Sutanto told Reuters by telephone.

"There was one message to their families, saying they were ready to die and that soon they will be in heaven. They looked very adamant with the teaching they had received 
 They showed no traces of doubt."

The three bombers walked into restaurants on Bali on October 1, detonating explosives-laden backpacks almost simultaneously.

Sutanto said the tapes and identification cards of the three suicide attackers were found on Wednesday in the central Java city of Semarang at a house they suspect was rented by Noordin M. Top, their most wanted militant after Azahari.

The seizure coincided with the arrest on Wednesday of a militant in Semarang who had recently come from where Azahari was hiding in East Java, helping tip off police about his location. Top, however, had eluded capture, police said.

Asked if the bombers had condemned the West, particularly the United States, Sutanto said: "Yes, among others. And also clerics whom they think are not implementing correct teachings."

Sutanto said the tapes would be shared with Islamic clerics in the world's most populous Muslim nation.

"We will show these to clerics so that they will realize there have been continuous efforts to influence the young generation to carry out wrong actions," Sutanto said.

Anti-terrorism campaigns in Indonesia have often faced challenges because of the belief in conspiracy theories that the United States wants to attack Islam. Ample space is also given to militant voices and sympathisers in some Indonesian media.

Muslim clerics were beginning to help police after a period of reluctance to condemn militants, who regularly use religion as a shield for their actions, Jakarta's top counter-terrorism official, police general Ansyaad Mbai, said earlier.

But Indonesia needed more co-operation from the public to track down Islamic militants, he told Reuters.

"Sometimes, terrorists are even considered as heroes," Mbai said in a telephone interview.
Posted by: Dan Darling 2005-11-11
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=134751