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Indonesia: Nine Suspected Militants Arrested

The suspects were all members of Mujahidin Indonesia Timur, a group that had been controlled until last year by one of the first Indonesian militants to pledge loyalty to ISIS.
The suspects were all members of Mujahidin Indonesia Timur, a group that had been controlled until last year by one of the first Indonesian militants to pledge loyalty to ISIS.
indonesia  nine suspected militants arrested
Indonesian security forces stand guard at the hospital where a body believed to be that of the country's most-wanted militant, Santoso, who was killed in a clash with security forces, is lying in Palu, Central Sulawesi, Indonesia July 19, 2016 in this photo taken by Antara Foto. Credit: Antara Foto/Reuters
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Indonesian security forces stand guard at the hospital where a body believed to be that of the country's most-wanted militant, Santoso, who was killed in a clash with security forces, is lying in Palu, Central Sulawesi, Indonesia July 19, 2016 in this photo taken by Antara Foto. Credit: Antara Foto/Reuters

Indonesian security forces stand guard at the hospital where a body believed to be that of the country's most-wanted militant, Santoso, who was killed in a clash with security forces, is lying in Palu, Central Sulawesi, Indonesia July 19, 2016 in this photo taken by Antara Foto. Credit: Antara Foto/Reuters

Jakarta: Indonesian police arrested nine suspected militants on the island of Sulawesi, a police spokesman said on Saturday, in an operation that media reported had targeted a group with affiliations to ISIS.

With investigations continuing, police spokesman Martinus Sitompul declined to give further details, but media reported police had also seized bomb-making materials meant for use in attacks on police and official buildings.

The suspects were all members of Mujahidin Indonesia Timur, a group that had been controlled until last year by one of the first Indonesian militants to pledge loyalty to ISIS.

Santoso had been the country's most-wanted men before he was killed in a gunbattle with police and military forces last July, and security officials have been expecting reprisal attacks.

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Some members of his group were believed to be still hiding in Sulawesi's dense jungles.

Security experts say that Indonesia, an officially secular state with the world's largest Muslim population, faces a growing threat from supporters of ISIS.

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Last month, police killed a militant after he detonated a small bomb in the city of Bandung. Authorities said they were investigating whether he had links to a radical network sympathetic to ISIS.

(Reuters)

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This article went live on March eleventh, two thousand seventeen, at forty-eight minutes past two in the afternoon.

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