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Hundreds of elite TNI members deployed to hunt Santoso

Indonesian Military (TNI) soldiers stand guard on the KRI Banjarmasin military vessel in Poso, Central Sulawesi, on Sunday

Ruslan Sangadji (The Jakarta Post)
Poso
Sun, January 24, 2016

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Hundreds of elite TNI members deployed to hunt Santoso Indonesian Military (TNI) soldiers stand guard on the KRI Banjarmasin military vessel in Poso, Central Sulawesi, on Sunday. More than 1,000 elite TNI members have been deployed to the area to join Operation Tinombala to hunt for Indonesia's most wanted terrorist, Santoso. (thejakartapost.com/Ruslan Sangadji) (TNI) soldiers stand guard on the KRI Banjarmasin military vessel in Poso, Central Sulawesi, on Sunday. More than 1,000 elite TNI members have been deployed to the area to join Operation Tinombala to hunt for Indonesia's most wanted terrorist, Santoso. (thejakartapost.com/Ruslan Sangadji)

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span class="inline inline-center">Indonesian Military (TNI) soldiers stand guard on the KRI Banjarmasin military vessel in Poso, Central Sulawesi, on Sunday. More than 1,000 elite TNI members have been deployed to the area to join Operation Tinombala to hunt for Indonesia's most wanted terrorist, Santoso. (thejakartapost.com/Ruslan Sangadji)

Hundreds of elite Indonesian Military (TNI) soldiers are set to swarm Central Sulawesi's Poso forests in an effort to capture the country's most wanted terrorist, Santoso, and members of his extremist group.

More than 1,000 soldiers from the Navy's Amphibious Reconnaissance Battalion and the Special Underwater Unit arrived in Poso on Sunday morning on the KRI Banjarmasin-592 vessel from Surabaya, East Java.

The troops gathered at the Sintuwu Maroso Battalion headquarters in Poso before being assigned to several locations to hunt the Santoso-lead East Indonesia Mujahidin.

Around 880 soldiers from the Army's Special Forces (Kopassus) also arrived at Mutiara airport in Palu on two Hercules airplanes on Saturday.

The authorities restricted journalists from covering the arrival of the soldiers.

The soldiers' deployment was part of the government's Operation Tinombala 2016, held jointly between the police and the TNI, aimed at arresting around 45 members of the radical group.

The authorities believe Santoso, also known as Abu Wardah, and his followers are hiding out in Poso's forests. They are suspected of building a military training camp and conducting guerrilla strategies in the forest.

The group is believed to have been behind several attacks against police officers and police posts in Central Sulawesi since 2011.

The troops, along with the police officers, are set to hunt for Santoso in the forests up to Poso's borders. They will all have different tasks, Operation Tinombala commander and Central Sulawesi Police chief Brig. Gen. Idham Azis said on Sunday.

"There are groups assigned to go after Santoso and there are also others whose task is to isolate the Santoso group's movements," he said.

Operation Tinombala area chief Sr. Comr. Leo Bona Lubis admitted that the police faced difficulties in arresting Santoso, who is believed to have orchestrated attacks that killed several police officers in Poso and Palu, as his hideaways are hidden deep in the forest and are difficult to reach.

The East Indonesia Mujahidin terrorist group has around 45 members, including a woman from Bima, West Nusa Tenggara, and two Chinese Uighurs.

The police and TNI previously launched Operation Camar Maleo last year, which failed to catch the fugitive. A member of Santoso's group, believed to be a frontline executor, was killed during a raid last week. (rin)

 

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