Sunday, January 01, 2006

TROP marks the new year in true spirit of Mohammed

Indonesian blast targets Christians


PALU, Indonesia -- Suspected Muslim terrorists set off a powerful bomb packed with nails yesterday at a busy market frequented by Christians, killing eight persons and wounding 45 as they bought pork for New Year's Eve celebrations.
The blast occurred in Palu on Sulawesi Island, which has been plagued in recent years by religious violence and terrorism by Islamic extremists.
The early-morning explosion sent ball bearings and nails tearing into vendors and shoppers, leaving the market scattered with dismembered bodies. Police and passers-by carried bloodied bodies to cars. One man, apparently unhurt, held his head in his hands as he screamed.

"There was a billow of smoke and then a massive bang, and my ears were deafened," said Kartini, a 32-year-old Christian woman who was hospitalized with shrapnel wounds to her chest and feet.

"I was in shock and had to tell myself to move away. I screamed for help," said Kartini, who like many Indonesians uses a single name.

Police said eight persons died in the attack. Hospital officials said at least 45 were wounded, with more than 20 suffering serious injuries.

The religious affiliations of the dead were not immediately released. However, the market sold only pig and dog meat, both of which are forbidden under Islam. Few, if any, Muslims would have been in the covered market.

The country's security minister, Widodo Adisucipto, told reporters the bombing was linked to terrorist groups. He refused to elaborate, but suspicion immediately fell on Jemaah Islamiyah, an al Qaeda-linked group that has been blamed for a series of bloody bombings in Indonesia since 2000, including two attacks on Bali that together killed 222 persons, many of them foreigners.

Jemaah Islamiyah is also accused in Christmas Eve church bombings five years ago that left 19 dead.

Officials had warned repeatedly that militants in Jemaah Islamiyah might stage Christmas and New Year's attacks in Indonesia, the world's most-populous Muslim nation. The group wants to establish an Islamic state spanning Indonesia, Malaysia, Singapore and the southern Philippines.

The police chief for Central Sulawesi province, Brig. Gen. Oegroseno, said late yesterday that investigators believed a local resident detained two hours after the attack "may be declared as a suspect." He refused to release any other information about that person.

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono condemned the blast, which occurred despite heightened security nationwide. More than 47,000 soldiers and policemen have been deployed at churches, shopping centers and hotels to try to ward off terrorist attacks during Christmas and New Year's.

Palu is about 1,000 miles northeast of Jakarta, the national capital. Sulawesi Island's 12.5 million residents are split mainly between Christians and Muslims, but there are tiny Buddhist and Hindu communities.

Central Sulawesi was the scene of fierce battles between Muslims and Christians in 2001 and 2002 that killed about 1,000 people and attracted Islamic militants from all over Indonesia, who were responding to calls for a holy war.

Despite a peace deal, Islamic militants have continued a campaign of attacks on Christians, including market blasts in May that killed 20 persons and the beheadings of three Christian schoolgirls in October. No one has been charged in those attacks.

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One of our hopes for aught-six is that the disloyal domestic opposition will wake up and realize that the true threat to them comes not from Christians, who merely reserve the right to disapprove of their behaviour, but from the Jihadists who disapprove to the point of wanting them obliterated.

We might tut-tut at sin but we will defend to the death the sinner's (and that certainly includes us) right to exist.