Islamic State claims responsibility for deadly Jakarta attacks

Coordinated bombs, shootings leave two dead; police say assault ‘followed pattern of the Paris attacks’

Armed Indonesian police commandos arrive at the area outside a damaged Starbucks coffee shop after a series of explosions hit central Jakarta, January 14, 2016. (AFP Photo/Romeo Gacad)
Armed Indonesian police commandos arrive at the area outside a damaged Starbucks coffee shop after a series of explosions hit central Jakarta, January 14, 2016. (AFP Photo/Romeo Gacad)

AFP — Islamic State-linked suicide attackers struck at the heart of the capital of Muslim-majority Indonesia Thursday, blowing up a Starbucks and killing two civilians, police said.

Five extremists launched an assault copying “the pattern of the Paris attacks” as they detonated explosives and shot at people in a district packed with malls, embassies and United Nations offices. Five gunmen were killed by security forces.

The assault also left a Westerner and an Indonesian man dead and 19 other people injured, in what the country’s president dubbed “acts of terror.”

“There is a strong suspicion that this is an ISIS-linked group in Indonesia,” national police spokesman Anton Charliyan told AFP, referring to the Islamic State group by an alternative name.

“From what we see today, this group is following the pattern of the Paris attacks.”

IS gunmen killed 130 people in a series of coordinated attacks on the French capital in November.

Indonesian police take position behind a vehicle as they pursue suspects after a series of blasts hit the Indonesia capital Jakarta, January 14, 2016. (AFP Photo/Bay Isomoyo)
Indonesian police take position behind a vehicle as they pursue suspects after a series of blasts hit the Indonesia capital Jakarta, January 14, 2016. (AFP Photo/Bay Isomoyo)

No one immediately claimed responsibility for Thursday’s attack on Thamrin Street, which prompted a security lockdown in central Jakarta and enhanced checks all over the crowded city of 10 million.

However, Aamaq, a news agency affiliated with the Islamic State group, quoted an unidentified source as saying the militant group carried out the attack.

“A source to Aamaq: Fighters from the Islamic State carried out this morning an armed attack that targeted foreigners and the security forces tasked with protecting them in the Indonesian capital Jakarta,” it said.

The claim of IS involvement will send a chill through Indonesia and other parts of Southeast Asia with Muslim populations, where fears abound that extremists bloodied on the battlefields of the Middle East could have brought their jihad home.

Indonesia suffered several major bomb attacks by Islamic radicals between 2000 and 2009, including the 2002 strike on the resort island of Bali that killed 202 people.

A security crackdown weakened the most dangerous networks, leading to a long lull in large-scale strikes.

But the New York-based Soufan Group says that of the 500-700 Indonesians who traveled abroad to join the self-proclaimed caliphate of the IS, scores have since returned.

“We know that ISIS has the desire to declare a province in this region,” said Kumar Ramakrishna, a counter-terrorism analyst at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies in Singapore.

“The threat of returning Southeast Asian fighters radicalized in the Iraq/Syria region are also another factor of concern.”

Gunfire

Police hide behind vehicles during an exchange of gunfire with suspects hiding near a Starbucks cafe when another blast happens in Jakarta, January 14, 2016. (AFP Photo/Bay Isomoyo)
Police hide behind vehicles during an exchange of gunfire with suspects hiding near a Starbucks cafe when another blast happens in Jakarta, January 14, 2016. (AFP Photo/Bay Isomoyo)

Police chief Charliyan said the five-strong cell that struck Thursday included three suicide bombers who initially targeted a Starbucks opposite a major shopping mall.

After the first explosion, two men armed with pistols took two men hostage. He identified them as an Algerian and a Dutch national; however, Jakarta police chief Tito Karnavian said the second man was Canadian.

Charliyan said the Algerian managed to escape with bullet wounds, but the second man was shot dead on the spot and that an Indonesian man who had tried to help the hostages was also shot and killed.

“Soon afterwards, two men riding…. motorbikes, ran into a police post and blew themselves up,” he said, adding four officers had been left in a critical condition.

Witnesses said the gunman who emerged from Starbucks began firing at bystanders, reloading his weapon as security forces moved in behind the cover of moving vehicles.

‘Felt like an earthquake’

“I heard a loud bang, boom. It felt like an earthquake. We all went downstairs,” said Ruli Koestaman, 32, who had been in a nearby building when the attack started mid-morning.

“We then saw that the Starbucks downstairs was destroyed too. I saw a foreigner — westerner, a man — with a mangled hand but alive.

“A Starbucks waiter then ran out with blood coming out of his ear. And I asked anyone hurt inside, he said yes, one. Dead already.

“Then everybody gathered and a terrorist appeared. He had a gun and started shooting at us and then at Starbucks. Then the police post… exploded.”

Armed Indonesian police commandos arrive in the area outside a damaged Starbucks coffee shop after a series of explosions hit central Jakarta, January 14, 2016. (AFP Photo/Romeo Gacad)
Armed Indonesian police commandos arrive in the area outside a damaged Starbucks coffee shop after a series of explosions hit central Jakarta, January 14, 2016. (AFP Photo/Romeo Gacad)

Police said there were four blasts, although eyewitnesses reported at least six.

Graphic photographs from the scene showed the bloodied bodies of what appeared to be two men in civilian clothes lying by the side of a road next to the wrecked police post.

Another body, also apparently male, was pictured lying on his back in the centre of the street while another, almost naked, lay nearby.

Starbucks shuttered

Starbucks said it was shuttering all branches in the Indonesian capital in response to the attack.

“This store and all other Starbucks stores in Jakarta will remain closed, out of an abundance of caution, until further notice,” a statement said.

The area is home to several embassies, including those of the United States, France and Spain. A number of United Nations agencies are also housed nearby.

Britain and Australia advised their nationals to avoid the area.

Indonesian President Joko Widodo urged people to remain calm.

“Our nation and our people should not be afraid, we will not be defeated by these acts of terror,” he said, in comments broadcast by MetroTV.

“We also condemn the act that has disturbed the security and peace and spread terror among our people.”

National police spokesman Charliyan said the group had issued a crytpic warning in the lead-up to the attack.

“The warning said there will be a concert in Indonesia and it will be international news,” he told a local radio station.

Regional terrorism expert Rohan Gunaratna said the assault bore the hallmarks of the Islamic State group.

“The only group that has the capability and the intention to mount coordinated, simultaneous attacks in Jakarta is the ISIS network,” he told AFP in Singapore.

“There are a number of cells and groups that have pledged allegiance (IS chief) Abu Bakar Al Bagdadi and it is those cells and groups that are mounting these attacks.

“It is called ISIS Network in Indonesia. ISIS has created a network in Indonesia and that network is mounting attacks.”

AP and Times of Israel staff contributed to this report.

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