Daesh-linked militants kill four Christians in Indonesia: police
 
 
Daesh-linked
extremists killed four people in a remote Christian community on the Indonesian
island of Sulawesi, authorities said Saturday, with one victim beheaded and
another burned to death.
The group of
sword-and-gun wielding attackers ambushed Lembantongoa village in Central
Sulawesi province Friday morning, killing several residents and torching half a
dozen homes, including one used for regular prayers and services, police said.
No arrests had yet
been made and the motive for the attack was not immediately clear.
But authorities
pointed the finger at the Sulawesi-based East Indonesia Mujahideen (MIT), one
of dozens of radical groups across the Southeast Asian archipelago that have
pledged allegiance to Daesh.
Indonesia, the world’s
biggest Muslim majority nation, has long wrestled with Islamist militancy and
terror attacks, while Central Sulawesi has seen intermittent violence between
Christians and Muslims for decades.
“We reached the
conclusion that they (the attackers) were from MIT after showing pictures of its
members to relatives of the victims” who witnessed the ambush, said Sigi
Regency police chief Yoga Priyahutama.
The makeshift church
was empty at the time of the early morning attack by around eight militants, he
added.
“People were just in
their homes when it happened,” Priyahutama said.
Lembantongoa village
head Rifai, who like many Indonesians goes by one name, said one victim was
beheaded and another was nearly decapitated.
One of the other
all-male victims was stabbed while a fourth was burned to death in his home, he
added.
“Some residents
managed to escape, but the victims didn’t make it,” Rifai told AFP.
Indonesia’s Christians
have been targeted in the past, including in 2018 when IS-linked group Jamaah
Ansharut Daulah staged a wave of suicide bombings by families — including young
children — at churches in the country’s second-biggest city Surabaya, killing a
dozen congregants.
If confirmed to be the
work of MIT, Friday’s killings would be its first significant attack since the
organization’s leader was killed four years ago by Indonesia’s elite
anti-terror squad, according to Jakarta-based terrorism expert Sidney Jones.
“Through the attack
... they want to show that police efforts to arrest and kill members of the
group did not have any effect on” them, she said.
In 2018, MIT was
believed to have sent radicals posing as humanitarian workers into Central
Sulawesi’s quake-tsunami hit Palu city in a bid to recruit new members, Jones
said.
 
          
     
                                
 
 


