Bomb Blasts Indonesia Hotel

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JAKARTA (Reuters) - A huge car bomb tore through one of the top hotels in Indonesia's capital Tuesday, killing 14 people and wounding 150 in the second major terror attack to shake the world's most populous Muslim nation in a year.

The Jakarta governor said a suicide bomber was probably responsible for the blast at the JW Marriott Hotel, which ripped through the lobby and set fire to dozens of cars and taxis out front. Many windows in the 33-story hotel were blown out.

"It was panic. Mad panic," said Stephen Mellor, a foreign resident who was parking his car less than 100 yards from the hotel at the time of the blast.

"The police and paramedics did what they could, but they seemed overwhelmed. People were almost hijacking cars in desperation and piling the injured in them to take to hospital."

The blast was timed as workers poured out of offices for lunch and mosques called the faithful to prayer, and came just two days before a court delivers the first verdict in the trials of Muslim militants accused over last October's Bali bombings.

Diners were eating lunch in restaurants and cafes in the hotel and in a nearby office tower when the blast blew out windows and showered people with shards of glass.

Wreckage from the charred lobby was strewn over a wide area.

Australian tourist Simon Leuning had just arrived in Jakarta and was relaxing in his hotel room when the explosion occurred.

WINDOWS BLOWN IN

"The window blew in, blew me across the room," he told Reuters Television. "I got out of there as fast as I could."

The Indonesian Red Cross said 14 people died and 150 were wounded.

"Thirteen bodies have been evacuated to hospitals while the last one, a human head without body, was just found by a Red Cross team on the fifth floor of the hotel," a senior Red Cross official said.

National Police Chief General Da'i Bachtiar said the car bomb blew up near the lobby, not the basement as earlier reports suggested. He said the blast was similar to the Bali bombings.

Tuesday's attack coincided with high-profile trials of suspected Islamic militants on bomb-related charges -- including that of Abu Bakar Bashir, an influential cleric.

He is accused of leading the Southeast Asian Jemaah Islamiah militant Muslim network blamed for a series of attacks on Western targets, including October's Bali bombings that killed 202 people, most of them foreign tourists partying in nightclubs.

Police have said a Dutch banking executive was among the dead, while four Singaporeans, two Americans, two Australians and a New Zealander were among those wounded.

Bachtiar said one of the many areas of investigation would include several people who had yet to be arrested over the Bali attacks, although he gave no names and did not say anyone was suspected.

The Marriott, popular with foreign businessmen, is in the wealthy suburb of Kuningan on a major road through the city's business district. The hotel is close to the diplomatic area of Menteng where many Western embassies and consulates are based.

Management said the hotel was 70-80 percent full.

http://www.washingtonpost.com/ac2/wp-dyn/A20432-2003Aug5?language=printer
 
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