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    Indonesian bomb suspect never met bin Laden: lawyer

    Suspected Indonesian bombmaker Umar Patek's stay in the same Pakistani town where Osama bin Laden was later killed in a US raid was a coincidence and the pair never met, according to his lawyer.

    Patek, 45, faces six counts of murder, bomb-making and illegal firearms possession over the 2002 Bali nightclub attacks, and prosecutors say they will push for the death penalty.

    In his trial at the West Jakarta court on Monday, defence lawyers objected to the murder charges, saying Patek was not involved in planning the bombing that killed 202 people, including 88 Australians.

    Patek, once the most wanted terror suspect in Indonesia, had a $1 million bounty on his head under the US rewards for justice programme.

    He was extradited to Indonesia after being arrested in January 2011 in the Pakistani town of Abbottabad, where US commandos later killed Al-Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden.

    Defence lawyer Asludin Hatjani denied that Patek had gone to Pakistan to meet with the Al-Qaeda boss.

    "He went to Pakistan as part of his plans to migrate to Afghanistan. He never met Osama bin Laden in Pakistan and he had no plans to meet him. In fact, he had no idea Osama was in Abbottabad," Hatjani said.

    He denied Patek was linked to Al-Qaeda. "Even the police statements make no mention of his links to Al-Qaeda," he said.

    Patek was a suspected key member of Jemaah Islamiyah (JI), a Southeast Asian terror network with suspected links to Al-Qaeda.

    Hatjani added that Patek's role in the Bali bombings was smaller than the prosecution was trying to portray.

    "His role in the Bali bombing was that he... participated in assembling the bombs," he told reporters after Monday's session.

    "The premeditated murder charge is not appropriate."

    He said defence lawyers had also denied that Patek tested three M16 assault rifles to help prepare a terrorist training camp in Aceh province on Sumatra island, where police say militants were planning gun attacks on prominent Indonesian figures.

    "He never participated in the testing of firearms. He was in the area but to attend a wedding. He never saw any firearms or took part in the militant training... We call that this charge be legally invalid."

    "The prosecution will prove in future trials and bring forward witnesses to prove that our premeditated murder charge has basis," prosecutor Bambang Suharyadi told AFP.

    According to the indictment Patek was involved in assembling the bombs for the Bali attacks and strikes on churches in Jakarta on Christmas Eve of 2000.

    Patek allegedly used simple household tools including a rice ladle to assemble the Bali bombs, which were placed in ordinary filing cabinets, according to Suharyadi and details contained in the indictment.

    Patek is also wanted in the Philippines, where he allegedly plotted attacks with militants after escaping the Indonesian dragnet.

    He is believed to be indirectly associated with Indonesian terror suspect Hambali, who is in US custody at Guantanamo Bay, and radical Indonesian cleric Abu Bakar Bashir, who was jailed last June for funding terrorism.

    Patek's trial, which began last Monday, is expected to last at least four months.

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    3 comments

    • chinhomiah  •  Singapore, Singapore  •  3 months ago
      Whenever a terrorist goes on trial in Indonesia, many Singaporeans including Chinhomiah are somewhat taken aback to see the casual and friendly relationship between the defendant on the one hand, and the prosecution lawyers and judges on the other. Everyone is full of smiles. They even shake hands and exchange pleasantries. My goodness. If we didn't know it was the trial of someone who had played a part in the killing of innocent people in the misguided name of religion, what we seee on TV could well be interpreted as cordial friends fraternising over some pot-luck or buffet, minus the pork of course. I wonder how much of all this friendliness on the part of the prosecution and the judges is a form of future guarantee that no revenge would be exacted should one day the defendants or those of their ink should come into power. At the very least, all that fraternising must make people wonder whether the justice will be served in the midst of all that kampong buddy-buddy-ness.
    • max  •  Manila, National Capital Region  •  3 months ago
      Let the Indonesians hang him. Here in the Philippines, there is no death penalty because of the no good policy of the government to please the Catholic Church and the European Union. Besides the jail guards would just ;probably let him flee after paying them off.
    • YAHOOOO  •  Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia  •  2 months ago
      THEY HAVE LINKS TO AL-QAIDA TO THE M'SIAN GOBERMENT FOR THE BALI

      BOMBONGS, SOUTHERN THAILAND AND MINDANAO ABU SAYAF MILITANTS

      WHO WERE WELL TRAINED IN MALAYSIA.

      MALAYSIA & INDONESIA ARE HARBOURING ALQAIDA AND TALIBAN HIDEOUTS
      WHERE MILITARY TRAINING IS GIVEN.

      DONT BELIEVE THE M'SIAN & INDONESIAN GOBERMENT ANYMORE.
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