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Nearly simultaneous explosions hit Ritz-Carlton
and Marriott Hotels in Jakarta early Friday morning, killing at least
nine people and injuring dozens, according to local officials. People
ran out of the Marriott Hotel following a blast. Photo: Lydia Ruddy/Reuters
The blasts shattered windows just above the ground
floor of the Ritz-Carlton, and thick plumes of smoke could be seen
rising from the site. Police officers stood guard in front of the
damaged Ritz-Carlton Hotel following the explosion. Photo: Dadang Tri/Reuters
In 2003, a car bomb badly damaged the Marriott
Hotel and killed 12 people. Earlier this decade, Islamic terrorists
operating in Indonesia attacked several Western-linked buildings.
Police officers inspected the damage at the Marriott Thursday. Photo: Dita Alangkara/Associated Press
A member of the police bomb squad at the scene of the explosion at the Ritz-Carlton. Photo: Dita Alangkara/Associated Press
Police officers stood guard outside the Marriott, where debris was scattered. Photo: Dita Alangkara/Associated Press
A wounded woman lay on the ground following the
blast at the Ritz-Carlton. Lydia Ruddy, a witness who lives in the
area, told Reuters the explosions happened about five minutes apart. Photo: Lydia Ruddy/Reuters
An injured woman was evacuated by police officers from the Ritz-Carlton. Photo: European Pressphoto Agency
Hotel employees gathered outside the Ritz-Carlton following the blast. Photo: Dita Alangkara/Associated Press
Employees of the Ritz-Carlton gathered in an open field across from the hotel. Photo: Dita Alangkara/Associated Press
Dita Alangkara/Associated Press
Police officers inspected the damage after an explosion went off at the Marriott hotel in Jakarta on Friday.
Dadang Tri/Reuters Police standing guard in front of the damaged Ritz-Carlton hotel after an explosion in Jakarta on Friday.
The explosions, which occurred shortly before 8 a.m., damaged the Marriott Hotel and Ritz-Carlton Hotel. The blasts shattered windows just above the ground floor of the Ritz-Carlton, and thick plumes of smoke could be seen rising from the site. Witnesses at the scene told Indonesian Metro TV that the injured, including Indonesians and foreigners, were seen being taken away in ambulances. A presidential spokesman, Dino Patti Djalal, told CNN that the blasts were “a coordinated attack” and said that most of the fatalities - at least six - resulted from the Marriott blast. He added that foreign nationals were among the fatalities. The British soccer team Manchester United was due to arrive in Jakarta on Saturday, and at least some of the players had been booked into the Ritz-Carlton. The team is scheduled play a match against a team of Indonesian all-stars on Monday, although organizers were uncertain Friday if the event would go ahead as planned. In August 2003, a car bomb badly damaged the same Marriott, killing 12 people and injuring 150. Large hotels overseas – especially Western-owned hotels or those popular with foreigners -- have become prime targets for terrorists in recent years, with nearly a dozen major blasts at hotels since the Marriott was attacked here in 2003. The intelligence group Stratfor has called these high-profile hotels “the quintessential soft target.” The Marriott in Islamabad, Pakistan, was almost completely destroyed last September by a suicide bomber driving a truck full of explosives. That blast killed 53 and injured more than 260. Two months later, 10 gunmen swept through a tourist area of Mumbai, India, killing at least 164 people and taking numerous hostages in a three-day siege at two of the city’s landmark hotels, the Taj Mahal and Trident-Oberoi. Initial suspicion for the Friday blasts is likely to be directed at Jemaah Islamiyah, the Islamist terrorist network with links to Al Qaeda and cells throughout Southeast Asia. The United States government has placed Jemaah Islamiyah on its list of terrorist organizations. The Indonesian police, the defense ministry and the International Crisis Group have implicated Jemaah Islamiyah in the previous bombing of the Jakarta Marriott. The bomber was known to be a member of the group; he was identified after the blast when his severed head was found on the sixth floor of the hotel. Jemaah Islamiyah also bombed two nightclubs in Bali, Indonesia, in October 2002. Two coordinated explosions killed 182 people – most of them foreign tourists -- and wounded 240. A subsequent series of explosions in Bali, in October 2005, killed 20 people, another attack tied to the Islamist network. Several members of Jemaah Islamiyah have been convicted in the 2002 Bali attacks, including the group’s most senior leader, the militant Islamic cleric Abu Bakar Bashir. Last November, three men were executed by firing squad for their roles in the blast. Another prime suspect in the Bali bombings, Mas Selamat bin Kastari, was apprehended by Malayasian authorities in April, more than a year after escaping from a prison in Singapore.
Norimitsu Onishi reported from Jakarta and Mark McDonald from Hong Kong.
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