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Islamic militancy
AsiaSoutheast Asia

Indonesian militants apologise to victims of their attacks

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Australian Federal Police outside the Australian Embassy in Jakarta after a bomb attack in 2004 that killed nine people and wounded 173. Photo: AP
Associated Press

The Indonesian government is bringing together dozens of convicted Islamic militants and survivors of attacks in what it hopes will be an important step in combating radicalism and fostering reconciliation.

About 120 reformed militants will apologise to dozens of victims including survivors of the 2002 Bali bombings and the 2004 bombing of the Australian embassy in Jakarta, according to Irfan Idris, director of de-radicalisation at Indonesia’s counterterrorism agency.

The three days of meetings at a Jakarta hotel began on Monday.

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“Many militant convicts have changed and are taking the right course with us by drawing on their experience to prevent others from taking up violence,” Idris said. “These facts have inspired us to reconcile them with their victims.”

File photo of the ruins of the Sari Club after it was flattened by a bomb attack in Kuta, Bali, in 2002. Photo: AP
File photo of the ruins of the Sari Club after it was flattened by a bomb attack in Kuta, Bali, in 2002. Photo: AP
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Indonesia has imprisoned hundreds of Islamic militants in the years since the Bali bombings that killed more than 200 people, mostly foreigners.

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