Indonesian police foil 'jihad' attacks

Intelligence from the AFP and FBI has led to arrests of suspected Islamist militants on Java, Indonesia's national police chief says.

Two Indonesian navy seals 'Denjaka,' in civilian clothes

Counter-terrorism police have arrested six people suspected of planning attacks in Indonesia. (AAP)

Indonesian counter-terrorism police say they have arrested suspected Islamist militants across the island of Java, foiling separate plots to bomb minority Shia communities and target Christmas and New Year celebrations.

National police chief General Badrodin Haiti told the Jakarta Globe that the raids to round up the men, which began on Friday, were prompted by intelligence from the Australian Federal Police and US Federal Bureau of Investigation.

Bomb-making materials and "jihad manuals" were seized after the arrest of six men in central and west Java who were either members or supporters of the Sunni militant group Islamic State, the Globe said on its website.

Chemicals and weapons were found buried under a tree at one raid site in the city of Solo.

The Globe said their plan was to launch attacks in Java and neighbouring Sumatra on communities of Shia, who represent a tiny minority in Indonesia.

Indonesia has the world's largest Muslim population, the vast majority of whom practise a moderate form of the religion.

Separately, police said four men suspected of being weapons specialists and strategists of the al Qaeda-affiliated Jamaah Islamiah group had been arrested in east Java.

"They had made plans for actions in the near term, in relation to Christmas and New Year," Budhi Herdi Susianto, chief of police in the east Java regency of Mojokerto told Metro TV.

Indonesia had a spate of militant attacks in the 2000s, the deadliest of which was a nightclub bombing on the holiday island of Bali that killed 202 people, including 88 Australians in 2002.

Police have been largely successful in destroying domestic militant cells since then, but officials now worry about a resurgence in militancy inspired by groups such as Islamic State and Indonesians who return after fighting with the group.

Authorities plan to deploy more than 150,000 security personnel and several religious organisations to safeguard churches and public places around the country during Christmas and New Year's Eve celebrations, the country's military chief said on Friday.

Indonesia is home to an estimated 25 million Christian people, roughly 10 per cent of the total population. They live mostly not on smaller, more remote islands, not on the two most populated islands of Java and Sumatra.


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Source: AAP


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Indonesian police foil 'jihad' attacks | SBS News