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Starbucks hit in deadly attack in Jakarta that killed at least seven Militants strike Indonesia’s capital, killing 2 as police probe Islamic State links
(about 3 hours later)
Militants staged a bloody suicide bomb and gun attack Thursday outside a Starbucks cafe, among other locations, in Indonesia’s capital of Jakarta, leaving at least seven people dead from what police said were half a dozen separate explosions. Militants staged suicide bombings and opened fire in the center of Indonesia’s capital on Thursday in attacks that authorities investigated as possible attempts by Islamic State followers to stage a Paris-style rampage in the teeming streets of Jakarta. Five attackers were among the seven dead.
Police engaged the attackers in a long, running gunfight in the wake of the attack, in which five of the attackers and two others were killed, the Associated Press reported. There was no immediate claim of responsibly, but a spokesman for Indonesia’s national police, Maj. Gen. Anton Charilyan, said the attackers had been identified and were believed “affiliated” with the Islamic State possibly linked to an Indonesian group that has sent volunteers to fight in Syria.
If confirmed, it would mark one of the group’s deepest reaches into Asia after carrying out violence in North Africa, Europe and possibly linked to Tuesday’s suicide blast that killed 10 German tourists in the shadow of Istanbul’s famed Blue Mosque.
The Jakarta assailants appeared outfitted for a running siege: armed with handguns, grenades and homemade bombs, police said. They also followed tactics that have become a hallmark of recent urban terrorism — hitting targets with limited security.
The mayhem opened with a suicide blast at a Starbucks while two gunmen outside opened fire, killing a Canadian man, said Jakarta police chief Maj. Gen. Tito Karnavian. Moments later, two suicide bombers struck a traffic police post, killing themselves and an Indonesian man.
As police swarmed the area, the remaining attacker opened fire, touching a 15-minute gun battle that left two assailants dead, Karnavian said.
[Malaysia police on alert after Jakarta attack][Malaysia police on alert after Jakarta attack]
According to Australia Broadcasting, bodies were seen lying in the streets during the ensuing battle. Security forces later put the streets on lock down, including areas near the U.S. Embassy and other diplomatic sites. At the Starbucks, six bombs were found stashed.
While no group immediately claimed responsibility for the attack, a police spokesman, Anton Charliyan, told reporters that authorities had “received a threat from Islamic State that Indonesia will be the spotlight.” But Indonesia’s President Joko Widodo asked that the public avoid speculation about who was responsible for the attack. “So we think their plan was to attack people and follow it up with a larger explosion when more people gathered,” said the police spokesman Charilyan. “But thank God it didn’t happen.”
The area where the attack occurred includes several embassies, a building that houses the Starbucks and Indonesia’s central bank. He speculated that the plot tried to copy the Nov. 13 terror attacks across Paris that left 130 people dead.
It was unclear how many people took part in the assault or whether Starbucks itself was targeted, or the Skyline Building in which it is housed. In 2009, militants in Jakarta staged attacks at Marriott and Ritz Carlton hotels, killing seven people. Five years earlier, bombings at nightclubs on the resort island of Bali in 2002 killed 202 people, mostly foreigners.
In 2009, militants staged attacks at two other high-profile symbols of U.S. capitalism, a JW Marriott hotel and a Ritz Carlton hotel. Indonesian officials had warned last month of a “credible threat” of an attack in the world’s largest Muslim nation and brought out 150,000 security personnel to keep an eye on churches, airports and other places, the Associated Press reported.
Indonesian officials had warned last month of a “credible threat” of an attack in the world’s largest Muslim nation and, according to AP, brought out 150,000 security personnel to keep an eye on churches, airports and other places.
On Jan. 3, the U.S. Embassy in Jakarta warned Americans of “a potential threat” against U.S.-associated hotels and banks in Surabaya, about 500 miles east of Jakarta on the island of Java.On Jan. 3, the U.S. Embassy in Jakarta warned Americans of “a potential threat” against U.S.-associated hotels and banks in Surabaya, about 500 miles east of Jakarta on the island of Java.