Terror Lives

LATEST STORIES
 Wolfowitz: Bali a 'Wake-up Call'
 Indonesia's Own Bin Ladens
 Terror Hits Hard in Indonesia
 The Attack: In Their Own Words
 Assessing The Usual Suspects


PHOTO ESSAY
 Bali in the Aftermath


INTERACTIVE GRAPHICS
 Asia's Terrorist Groups


ARCHIVES
 Jemaah Islamiah: Still a Danger
 Confessions of a Terrorist
 Hambali: Asia's Terror Kingpin


SPECIAL REPORTS
 Asia's War on Terror
 Indonesia's Dirty Little Holy War


CNN.com: Horror in Paradise
Suspicion for the bomb attack in Bali that killed more than 180 people, mostly foreigners, has fallen on Jemaah Islamiah, a regional extremist group linked to Osama bin Laden's terror network.

"I am not afraid to say, though many have refused to say, that an al-Qaeda network exists in Indonesia," Indonesia's Defense Minister Matori Abdul Djalil said after an emergency cabinet meeting in Jakarta. "The bomb blast is related to al-Qaeda with the co-operation of local terrorists."

But Jemaah Islamiah's alleged leader, Abubakar Ba'asyir, denies any involvement. "All the allegations against me are groundless," he said at the weekend. "I challenge them to prove anything. I suspect that the bombing was engineered by the United States and its allies to justify allegations that Indonesia is a base for terrorists."

Abubakar, who lives openly in the Javanese town of Solo, is a self-confessed fan of Osama bin Laden, describing him as a "true Islamic warrior" for taking on the West. Aged 64, he is a cleric and the head of the Mujahidin Council of Indonesia, a pro-Islam organization.

His deputy, and the man responsible for Jemaah Islamiah's day-to-day operations, is Riduan "Hambali" Isamuddin. Hambali is wanted by police in five countries for handiwork that includes hijackings, bombings and anti-Christian violence on Indonesia's Ambon.

To read more about both men and the Jemaah Islamiah group, visit the following stories:

Indonesia: Taking the Hard Road
Despite a rash of arrests, Jemaah Islamiah is still a danger in Southeast Asia

The Life and Times of Asia's Terror Kingpin
Terrorist mastermind Hambali may be the most dangerous man in the region

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