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Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Castor Bean jihad

Once again, in Indonesia, jihadists plan and carry out all sorts of attacks, using anything that will kill easily.  This time it was cyanide placed in food where the police eat, next time could be in the doughnuts the police eat. 

This plot was foiled, the next one might not be.  Rest assured, Islam will continue to agitate and agress, not only in Indonesia but around the world.

1400 years of conquest and subjugation by the sword leaves no doubt of this.


From The Jakarta Globe June 13 by Farouk Arnaz & Zaky Pawas

Police Bust Open Suspected Terrorist Poison Plot
Sixteen terrorist suspects have been arrested for their alleged roles in separate plots, including a group not linked to any established networks that reportedly planned to poison police officers.

“Between Thursday and Sunday, we captured 16 individuals suspected of terrorism in various cases,” National Police spokesman Sr. Comr. Boy Rafli Amar said on Monday.

The 16 arrested by Densus 88 include seven nabbed in Jakarta; two in Pekalongan, Central Java; two in East Kalimantan; two in Central Sulawesi; and one in Bandung.

The men arrested in Jakarta were allegedly plotting to poison police officers, Boy said, adding that he was unable to provide any further information on the identities of the suspects.

On Friday, a police source told the Jakarta Globe that a suspect arrested in Pekalongan, identified as H.K., was linked to slain terror mastermind Dulmatin, a senior figure from
the Jemaah Islamiyah regional network.

Ali Fauzi, the younger brother of convicted terrorist Mukhlas, who was executed for his role in the 2002 Bali bombing, said he had spent time training
with H.K. in the southern Philippines.

“I was with H.K. for five years in Moro. He is the brother-in-law of Dulmatin,” Ali said. “I hear that he was arrested for hiding Dulmatin before he was shot [dead] by the police last year.”

Dulmatin was killed during a police raid in South Tangerang last year.

Meanwhile, the police source said on Monday that the seven suspects arrested in Jakarta were from a new terrorist network.

“So far, they have not been involved in any other networks,” the source said. “They had only plotted to put cyanide in the food eaten by police officers.”

Jakarta Police spokesman Sr. Comr. Baharuddin Djafar said police personnel should not be overly concerned about the poison plot. “While we must remain alert, we should not overreact,” he said.

Officials had earlier said the group was planning to poison the food at police cafeterias.

According to Baharuddin, stricter controls had been placed on food served to officers.
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