On this day (9 November 2008
at 00:15pm), The Indonesian terrorist A.K.A Amrozi the Smiling Assassin, was
executed together with Imam Samudra and Ali Ghufron Mukhlas by firing squad in Nusa Kambangan Island, Indonesia. As I had blog a previous post on
Amrozi, I will give some more information from Wikipedia and other news
sources, before giving my thoughts on another post.
Ali Amrozi
bin Haji Nurhasyim (5 July 1962 – 9 November 2008), also known as Amrozi,
was an Indonesian executed for his part in the 2002 Bali bombings.
Early life:
He was a native of
Lamongan, East Java and was the fifth of 13 children. He attended the Al-Mukmin
Islamic school founded by Abu Bakar Bashir along with his brothers Mukhlas and
Ali Imron. Amrozi was born in Tenggulun, East Java in 1962. His family were
strictly religious, following the Wahhabist school of Islam which has its roots
in Saudi Arabia. Amrozis' grandfather established the first pesantren or
Islamic boarding school in Tenggulun. His father Nur Hasyim taught his sons that
Javanese customs were considered heresy under Islamic law and were therefore to
be eradicated. Nur Hasyim was involved in the Indonesian independence struggle
against the Dutch, often regailing his sons with tales of heroism by his fellow
Muslims. Amrozi displayed little interest in school or religious studies. Police
psychiatric reports undertaken after the Bali bombings describe him as
"simple" and "shallow" and report that he was easily
influenced by others. They describe him as having an immature personality and
lower than normal intellectual capacity. Amrozis' brother, Ali Imron, reported
that Amrozi was continually in trouble at school and at home, being banned and
expelled by teachers and stealing items from his own home and selling them. He
only made it to the second year of high school. At the age of 23 Amrozi married
for the first time. He married a local girl. The marriage lasted only two
years, producing a daughter. He attempted high school again but dropped out
soon after. Seemingly without purpose and lacking direction he began
vandalising Javanese graves in his village in an apparent attempt to gain
approval from his strictly religious and respected father. He mortified his
parents by desecrating the grave of a respected village elder, subsequently
spending a week in police custody. Amrozis'elder brother Muklas was a respected
member of a pesantren in Malaysia. Amrozi had not seen him for over ten years.
He had been a stabilising influence to some degree in Amrozis' early adult
years. Amrozi decided to visit Muklas but was initially shunned and rejected
because of his errant ways. He was devastated by this and realised that to
become accepted he needed to become a good Muslim. Amrozi ceased smoking and
watching movies. He began praying five times a day in his efforts to gain the
acceptance of Muklas. Muklas finally agreed to let him stay. Amrozi was
talented with his hands and became the local repairman, fixing cars and mobile
phones. By trade he became a mechanic and owned the van used in the Sari Club
bombing. It was Amrozi who purchased the explosives.
2002 Bali bombing and trial:
His two brothers
Ali Ghufron (aka Mukhlas) and Ali Imron were also both involved in the 2002
Bali bombings. Mukhlas is suspected of converting Amrozi to militancy when the
two were reunited in Malaysia in the late 1980s. Both of his brothers were also
taken into police custody, and Mukhlas was executed with him.
Amrozi was
allegedly motivated by his view of American foreign policy, which he deemed to
have an imperialist agenda toward the Islamic world.
In an interview
with the chief of investigations, General I Made Mangku Pastika, when asked
about Amrozi's feelings toward the attack said:
“There is no regret at all for him [Amrozi]. Doing his duty to God, he shows no regret. He's very calm, very cool... proud of his activities."
About the fact that most of the Westerners who died were Australians rather than the Americans that Amrozi has stated he was targeting, Mr
Pastika stated, "He doesn't regret it but he is just unhappy"
Amrozi's seemingly
nonchalant demeanour throughout his trial earned him nicknames such as
"The Smiling Assassin", "The Smiling Bomber" and "The
Laughing Bomber".
Sentence
and execution
On 7 August 2003,
he was found guilty for his role in the Bali bombing and sentenced to death by
firing squad. His execution was delayed for 5 years, due to legal
technicalities: the law under which he was convicted was not in effect at the
time of the bombing, and it was ruled illegal by the Indonesian High Court in
July 2004. Originally incarcerated in Denpasar's prison, he was moved to the
high-security prison island of Nusakambangan in October 2005. While in prison,
on 12 May 2008, he re-married his first wife, Rahma, in a ceremony which was
conducted in his absence in his home village, while remaining married to his
current wife.
Together with the
two other bombers (Imam Samudra and his brother, Mukhlas) who each received
death sentences, he launched a constitutional challenge against the use of
firing squads. Amrozi preferred beheading. In October 2008, he remained
unrepentant and claimed revenge would be taken for his death.
During the month,
his final appeals were rejected and the Attorney General's office announced
that he would be executed by firing squad in early November 2008. According to
a source in Indonesia's Attorney General Office, the executions were to be done
before the end of Sunday, 9 November 2008. This was reportedly delayed from the
original plan to allow a representative from the family to identify the body
post-execution. From Amrozi's family, his younger brother, Ali Fauzi was sent
as a representative of his family.
Amrozi, along with
Imam Samudra and Huda bin Abdul Haq were shot at 00.15 local time on 9 November
2008. They were executed by firing squad. Despite his carefree demeanor
throughout his trial and incarceration, he was reported to have been pale faced
and shaking in the moments before his execution.
Thursday,
14 November, 2002, 10:28 GMT
Australian
fury at Bali bomber
Amrozi was paraded before the media on Wednesday
|
Pictures of a Bali bombing
suspect laughing and reports that he said he was "delighted" by the
attack have been widely condemned in Australia.
Australian Foreign Minister
Alexander Downer said they were "ugly images", while families of the
bomb victims said they were sickened.
But Indonesian police defended
their unusual interrogation of the man, Amrozi, which was carried out in view -
although out of earshot - of the media.
Bali police chief Major General
Budi Setiawan told reporters: "We have very special tactics and strategy
in questioning Amrozi".
Police said on Thursday that they
were preparing to release details and photographs of 10 more people suspected
of taking part in the 12 October bombing, which killed more than 190 people.
Outrage
The images of the "laughing
bomber" - as the Sydney Morning Herald termed him - came as the Australian
death toll rose to 66.
Up to 20 more people are still
missing, most are also believed to be Australian.
Monica Sanderson, the mother of
one of three Australian rugby players killed in Bali, said Amrozi's reaction
was "beyond comprehension".
"It makes you feel sick and
it makes you feel sad," she said.
"Young kids on a holiday of
a lifetime get killed, and these people carry on like that."
Reporters who witnessed the
interrogation on Wednesday said that Amrozi, 40, turned towards them and waved
during his questioning.
'Different
methods'
Mick Keelty, head of the
Australian Federal Police, acknowledged Amrozi's interrogation looked like a
circus.
But he cautioned that Indonesia's
justice system was "very different" to Australia's
"What we've got to be
careful of here is that we don't impose our own judicial system on
Indonesia," he told the Associated Press news agency.
Indonesia's police chief, General
Da'i Bachtiar, also played a tape which appeared to be Amrozi apologising to
his family.
Apology
"I only want to say I would
like to apologise to my family, younger brother, nephews, nieces, parents and
other relatives that I had no intention to involve them in this incident",
the tape said.
"It was only me and my
youngest brother Ali Imron," the tape added.
Mr Bachtiar said that Amrozi had
met a leading member of militant Islamic group Jemaah Islamiah, Imam Samudra,
in 2000, and the two men had planned the Bali bombing - meeting in Bali on 6
October.
Samudra, 32, has been on
Indonesia's wanted list for some time. He is implicated in a series of church
bombings in the country during Christmas 2000.
'Bomb!' cries happy Amrozi
By
Darren Goodsir in Denpasar, Bali, and Stephen Gibbs
August 7, 2003
On the eve of his sentencing for the Bali bombings, Amrozi said he was ready to be given the death penalty today. His alleged mentor, Imam Samudra, was even more elated that Jakarta's Marriott Hotel had been bombed, and hoped Jewish people were among the dead. "Happy," he told reporters excitedly when asked for his reaction to the latest atrocity. "Thanks be to God," said Samudra. "If it's Muslims who have done it, then I'm happy. Especially if it was for Jews . . . hopefully." Samudra, 33, had yelled out in English as he was led into court: "Go to hell Australia! Where are the Australians." Amrozi, his older brother Mukhlas, and Samudra, the alleged mastermind of the October 12 Kuta nightclub attacks, had been called as potential witnesses in the trial of Mubarok, accused of helping to make the bombs and allowing his bank account to be used to channel funds to buy vehicles and chemicals. Each refused the court's repeated requests to testify. "You don't need to hear from me any more," Amrozi told the judges. "It is not necessary because tomorrow I am going to get my punishment." He repeated his claim that he was ready to die, and a five-man panel of judges is widely tipped to grant him his wish today. Later in the day, the trial of Amrozi's younger brother, Ali Imron, reconvened. He burst into tears when the statement of a Paddy's Bar worker was read out in court, describing the night's trauma. "I am guilty . . . I am sorry," he told the judges. His damning evidence against Amrozi was a turning point in the case, and should prove influential in today's judgement. Tuning in from Melbourne will be David "Spike" Stewart, whose 29-year-old son, Anthony, was one of the 88 Australians killed. Spike Stewart turns 56 today. His only birthday wish is for news that Amrozi will be put to death. But if he could have icing on that cake, he would like greetings from Indonesia's President, Megawati Soekarnoputri. "I'd like a letter from her saying, 'You are welcome to join the firing squad.' " Five weeks ago, Mr Stewart met Amrozi's eyes in court. "Kamu Mati!" Mr Stewart yelled out - Bahasa for "You're dead". If he gets that wish today, Mr Stewart will celebrate with a few beers, then move on to "something short - like a litre of bourbon". Also in Melbourne, Samantha and Leanne Woodgate, both badly burned in the bombing, will rush home from work and appointments to sit anxiously in front of the television. "I want to see him shit himself in his seat," Samantha, 28, said yesterday. "He's turned our lives upside down. They all have." In a poor suburban flat in Denpasar, widow Endang Isnanik, 32, prays for the death sentence. She will crouch on her small tiled floor to witness on television the judgement of Amrozi, the first of the nightclub bombing suspects to be sentenced. Although the "smiling assassin" is not the mastermind behind the Kuta explosions, he is the most notorious of the suspects. For Mrs Isnanik - whose husband, Aris Munandar, was incinerated outside the Sari Club - Amrozi is also the font of her rage. Initially, Mrs Isnanik, a Muslim and mother of three young boys, did not want to testify, but then she chose to confront Amrozi. "I wanted to show him that he had not only killed foreigners, but Muslims as well. We were also the victims of his terrible crime. "But he showed no remorse or regret for his actions, and just sat smiling, and he really broke my heart that day." While some families spent months agonising over the fate of their relatives, the corpse of Mrs Isnanik's husband was handed over within 15 hours, believed to be the first body to be identified. Aris, a public transport operator, had left for work at 9pm on October 12. Most nights, he would earn about 50,000 rupiah, usually sleeping in his car in the queue on Jalan Legian, waiting for his turn to take home a patron. Mrs Isnanik slept through the explosion, which echoed across the island. But she dreamt that night of her husband telling her: "I am not going to be able to join you tonight, darling . . . I will be sleeping." Within an hour of the attack, Mrs Isnanik's brother was pounding on her door, fearing the worst. In the morning, relatives scoured Sanglah Hospital, eventually finding Aris's charred remains. At 1.30pm, while bedlam gripped the island, a small ambulance came into Mrs Isnanik's village to deposit the corpse. Hurriedly wrapped in a sheet, relatives carried it in and left it on the front porch of her two-room flat. Later that day, Aris was buried in a typical Muslim ceremony. "It has been very difficult since the bombing," Mrs Isnanik explained. "I get 600,000 rupiah a month [from a local charity] but I do not know how long the money will last. I just try to take each day at a time . . . and I pray." One son, Dwiga, refuses to cry, while another, three-year-old Izzul, tells neighbours his father is in Java, working for money to buy him a robot toy. Today, security will be tight for the judgement and sentencing, especially in light of Tuesday's terrorist strike in Jakarta. But at times during Amrozi's trial, it has been ridiculously lenient. In recent weeks, uncouth Australian tourists, many dressed in board shorts, beer singlets and thongs, have been allowed to stroll into court to giggle and point at the antics of the Islamic extremists on stage. It is a far cry from the restrictive measures in the opening stanza of the hearings. Mrs Isnanik, like almost everyone in Bali - Muslim, Christian and Hindu alike - wants Amrozi and his cohorts to be put before a firing squad. "And if there is something more than death, some heavier penalty the court can think of, then he should get that as well." AMROZI GUILTY, SENTENCED TO DEATHAugust 7, 2003 - 6:31PM
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Bali
bombers threaten revenge over executions
Indonesia correspondent Geoff Thompson
Updated
The
three Bali bombers on death row in Indonesia have threatened reprisals if their
executions go ahead.
The trio clearly enjoyed the media attention they received when journalists were allowed into Nusakambangan Prison.
When asked how he felt about the 88 Australians he helped kill six years ago, Amrozi said that if he had a chance he would kill more.
Samudra said he felt sorrow for the Muslims who died in those attacks, but none for the Australian unbelievers.
"For Australians I'm never sorry," he said.
Mukhlas, meanwhile, praised the recent suicide truck bombing of the Marriott Hotel in the Pakistan capital, Islamabad.
The bombers have often said they are ready to die, but as their date with a firing squad approaches their tone has turned threatening.
Mukhlas warned that all responsible for his execution would be executed themselves by mujahadeen fighters in Indonesia and around the world.
The bombers are expected to be executed before the end of the year.
Page
last updated at 08:34
GMT, Friday, 24 October 2008 09:34 UK
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Bali bombers' execution date set |
Three
men convicted over the 2002 Bali bombings will be executed in early November,
the Indonesian attorney general's office says.
They were found guilty of planning the attacks, which targeted nighclubs at Bali's tourist resort of Kuta.
The bombings were blamed on the militant group Jemaah Islamiah.
Friday's announcement comes after several appeals made on behalf of the three men.
A pledge by the attorney general to see them die by Ramadan - which fell in early September - was not met.
However in its latest statement, his office said: "All legal recourse for the convicts has been finalised, and all requirements met.
"The execution of Amrozi, Ali Ghufron and Imam Samudra will be carried out at the beginning of November."
Earlier this month, Indonesia's Constitutional Court rejected defence arguments that the three should be beheaded, instead of being executed by firing squad, which, they argued, did not guarantee instant death and would amount to torture.
The BBC's Lucy Williamson in Jakarta says few Indonesians support the bombers, but the execution of men who say they were defending Islamic values is likely to spark some reaction even so.
The smiling assassin dies with a whimper
- Cindy Wockner
- November 10, 2008 12:00AM
AMROZI, the smiling assassin, was not so brave when
faced with his own death.
Sources involved in the execution process said the three Bali bombers accepted their fate without a struggle
when they were shackled hand and foot and led from their jail cells to the
execution ground.
Amrozi was the least brave, and looked
"pale" and afraid, one source said.
He was also the quickest to die after all three
were strapped to wooden posts and shot by a firing squad.
His older brother Mukhlas was more defiant,
shouting Allah akbar -- God is great -- until the end.
It is believed Amrozi was tied to the middle post
with Mukhlas to his right and Imam Samudra, the third bomber, on his left.
The three bombers opted not to be blindfolded in
the lead-up to their execution by firing squad, officials said.
The three were standing when the shots rang out.
They were chained to separate 2m-high poles,
several metres from each other, and a doctor placed a marker over the exact
position of their hearts.
Then the 12 specially trained police snipers lined
up facing each of them, who after receiving the final order from their
commander, simultaneously peppered their bodies with 5.6mm bullets.
Only one sniper in each group of 12 had a live
bullet, said Jasmine Pandjaitan, a spokesman for Indonesia's Attorney-General's
office.
The three condemned men did not put up a fight
before their executions, he said.
"They were very co-operative," he said of
the convicted terrorists.
"They died immediately, a few moments after
they were shot," he added.
After the three were pronounced dead, their bodies
were taken to a health clinic for autopsy, and then prepared for burial, in
line with Islamic custom.
A brother of Amrozi and Mukhlas, Ali Fauzi, brought two 20m pieces of fabric from his home village in which to wrap the bodies of his siblings.
Amrozi was the most reviled of the bombers, smiling
and gloating about the bombings after he was captured.
After he was sentenced to death, he cheered and gave
the thumbs-up to the judges and survivors in court.
It was a different story on Saturday night as about
30 members of the paramilitary police Brimob arrived at Batu Jail on Nusa
Kambangan Island, off the cost of central Java.
Wearing balaclavas to hide their identity, the
officers went to the death row cells and shackled the three men.
"They looked like they accepted their fate.
They didn't struggle," a witness said.
Their ankles were bound so tightly they had to
shuffle from their cells. The rest of the jail was silent as they called out
"Allah Akbar".
"They were shouting but it was not really
loud. The situation was quite calm. Not all three of them were shouting at
once. It was separately, one then the other," a source said.
They were taken to double-cab pick-up trucks. Each
bomber was put in the middle of the second row of seats, flanked by armed
police. More police sat in the back.
The vehicles drove in convoy to the execution site
at Nirbaya, about 3km south of the jail. Amrozi was in the first vehicle,
followed by Samudra then Mukhlas.
It took longer than anticipated to reach the site
because a torrential downpour earlier in the night made the narrow and windy
track slippery and difficult to negotiate.
When they arrived, the bombers were taken from the
vehicles and tied to posts.
They were ministered to by three Muslim preachers
who read from the Koran.
Bali prosecutor Ida Bagus Wiswantanu then read out
the execution order, detailing their crimes and the death sentence.
At 12.15am local time, the order was given to fire.
It was a dark night, with the moon shrouded by
cloud. But the air was crisp and clean after the earlier monsoon rain.
At 12.20am, a doctor pronounced them dead and at
12.25am the three bodies were untied and taken to a nearby jail clinic for
autopsies.
The bodies were washed in the Muslim tradition.
- Additional reporting by Komang Suriadi and Git Anuggunathika
Check this video
to see the Bali Bombers on trial.
Check the Bali
Bombers giving their thoughts. (Warning: This video is not making fun of Islam. I have Muslim friends and I am not discriminating any religion here. I post this video to show the Bali Bombers' thoughts.)
Check this 3
videos to see CNN Journalist, Dan Rivers interviewing people on the 2002 Bali
Bombings.
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