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Southeast Asia
Bali Bombing Brains Bunged Back into Brig
2006-09-02

Indonesia's Bashir rearrested amid protests

Indonesian police arrested Muslim cleric Abu Bakar Bashir on Friday over suspected terror links, including to the 2002 Bali bombings, as he walked out of jail after serving time for lesser charges.
"Not so fast there, smiley, the warden wants a word with you."
Bashir was detained again without incident, but earlier his supporters hurled rocks and firebombs at police. The frail Bashir, accused of leading the al Qaeda-linked Jemaah Islamiah network, was served a warrant as he left a central Jakarta jail after 18 months in prison for immigration offences. "What we witnessed just now was an illegal action from the police. We have not seen that warrant," said Munarman, a lawyer for Bashir. Police had tried to question Bashir earlier this week regarding attacks, including the October 2002 bomb blasts in Bali that killed 202 people. He refused to cooperate.
"Vee hef our vays."
Back in detention, Bashir would now be questioned about numerous cases, said Suyitno Landung, chief criminal investigator for the national police. "Plenty of bombing cases. These are cases we have been investigating from 1999 to 2002, including the latest, the Bali bombings." In the October 2002 attack on the resort island, 202 people died, most foreign tourists. Bashir has consistently denied links to that and any terrorist acts, as well as to Jemaah Islamiah.
"It wuz some other guy named Bashir!"
His re-arrest will probably further enrage his militant supporters and anger Muslim leaders and politicians who accuse authorities of bowing to U.S. pressure over Bashir's case. Washington has said it wants Bashir, 65, to stay behind bars. Hundreds of his supporters were outside the prison, and many clashed with police before the smiling cleric was taken away. The protesters tore up paving stones to hurl at police, who threw the stones back and responded with tear gas, clubs and water cannons in running battles in the early morning that left many injured on both sides.

"THERE IS NO PROBLEM"

Police had said earlier they would re-arrest Bashir over allegations he had violated various anti-terrorism statutes. Under Indonesian law he could be held for up to six months for questioning and investigation before formal charges are laid. Asked for his reaction to being re-arrested, a smiling Bashir said: "There is no problem. There is no problem. I'm fine."
Nothing that some high velocity lead couldn't fix.
Police then drove him to police headquarters. According to a police warrant shown this week to reporters, allegations against him include terror conspiracy, plotting attacks, and ties to Jemaah Islamiah, believed to be responsible for violence throughout Southeast Asia.
And parking overtime in a carbomb only zone.
Previous charges against Bashir of treason and of leading Jemaah Islamiah had been dismissed or overturned. "Before we investigated Abu Bakar Bashir on a limited scale, but there are perpetrators who always linked him as the leader of a closed and secretive organization," said Landung.
"Someone inadvertantly showed us the secret handshake and we finally cracked this case wide open!"
National police spokesman Inspector-General Paiman told reporters: "This is not pressure from the United States. We made the arrest due to terrorism problems."
In other words; "The US embassy was terrifying us with threats of aid cuts."
A U.S. Embassy spokesman said Washington welcomed the move but denied charges of intervention in Indonesia's legal system. "There is extensive evidence of Abu Bakar Bashir's leadership role and personal involvement in terrorist activities, but the decision to pursue the prosecution is the Indonesian authorities'," he said.

Arresting Bashir and the prospect of a fresh trial pose a challenge to the world's most populous Muslim nation ahead of presidential elections in July, especially with sentiment for Washington at an all-time low over the war in Iraq and U.S. policies toward the Muslim world in general. In the past two weeks, Bashir has entertained a stream of visitors at the prison, from Islamist politicians to mainstream Muslim leaders, all accusing the United States of meddling. "Clearly this is intervention from foreigners, namely the United States," said well-known Muslim leader Din Syamsuddin.
Is there a flight of stairs near this guy's cell? Can we wax all the floors in his cell block and make him walk around in socks? Can we send him a Dell laptop?
Posted by:Zenster

#8  Let's face it. No matter what atrocities muslims commit against us, when the next earthquake/tsunami/fire/hangnail hits mulims, the west will be there with weeping reporters and boatloads of jizya. The best that can be hoped for is that individuals remember and next time keep their checkbooks in the drawer. If allah didn't want them to suffer, then he wouldn't have made them such assholes.

B-1s flyover. How lucky some low flight hour airframes are being deactivated from the active US inventory.
Posted by: ed   2006-09-02 16:42  

#7  Don't hold back, Frank. Let us know what you really think.
Posted by: Zenster   2006-09-02 16:26  

#6  not ONE fucking dollar to relief in any Islamic country from my pocket. Quake relief in Pakland is diverted to training jihadis. Indonesia arrests and will execute christians while they free Islamists. FUCK em. live on the 7th century ideology, the pages of the Quran will heat your hut and feed you.
Posted by: Frank G   2006-09-02 16:18  

#5  Actually, Mike, Bashir claimed the CIA had planted a micronuclear warhead on a deep ocean fault to cause the big tsunami. Needless to say (then why say it?), he also blamed the Bali bombing on some espionage cabal as well.

Indonesia has a final chance to demonstrate that it takes fighting global terrorism seriously. After routine sentence reductions for terrorists including Bashir himself, the Bali bomber Amrozi plotting round two of the Bali atrocities via WiFi laptop from his jail cell and the Keystone antics of its national security as they chased Noordin Topp from safe house to safe house, international patience has worn thinner than Indonesia's veneer of putative cooperation.

As voiced recently by others here and my own self since the first tsunami hit, come the next calamity, Indonesia had better have some good grades on its report card if they expect a red cent of aid from America. If the Bali bombers are still breathing and Bashir is walking free they might as well piss up a rope before coming to us.
Posted by: Zenster   2006-09-02 14:57  

#4  ...Was this the toothsome lad who said a few days ago that the US used a 'micro-nuclear warhead' at Bali?

"...C'mon, Bahire, you're under arrest!"
"For what??"
"Such a stupid godd*mn comment!"

Mike
Posted by: Mike Kozlowski   2006-09-02 10:55  

#3  Additionally, this pisses me off just as much...

"...U.S. policies toward the Muslim world..."

Yeah, such as all that evil first-responder aid and assistance after the tsunami. Indostan is nature's favorite Ground Zero. We can demonstrate how we regard this enmity when next they get the shit knocked out of them - by staying home and keeping our aid dollars. Somehow I think Howard would agree this makes more sense than throwing good and generous effort and money after bad.

They have a terminal case of Islam. Fuck Indonesia, now and forever. Mr Howard, since these assholes are in your backyard and you can't avoid dealing with them, is there anything you need? Apaches or Warthogs or anything?
Posted by: flyover   2006-09-02 06:31  

#2  Hope springs eternally. Unfortunately, Indonesia springs Bashir eternally.
Posted by: Zenster   2006-09-02 06:05  

#1  As in the past, Bashir will mock the Indo "justice system" and eventually walk. They wouldn't dare seek actual justice against him. He'll treat his momentary "incarceration" as a paid vacation, again. These pathetic transparent attempts to whitewash the Indos, the pretense that Bashir is somehow going to be nailed, are a farce.
Posted by: flyover   2006-09-02 04:44  

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