Two former associates of alleged Bali bomb maker Umar Patek testified
that funds from al-Qaeda paid for the Mitsubishi used in the lethal 2002
attack.
Osama bin
Laden sent as much as $30,000 to the militants who carried out the 2002 Bali
bombing, witnesses in the trial of terror suspect Umar Patek testified. The
funds, they said, covered numerous expenses incurred by the bombers
"I actually did not know where the money came
from but [convicted bomber] Mukhlas told me that it was received gradually from
Osama," Mohammad Ikhsan, also known as Idris, told the West Jakarta
District Court on Monday (March 26th).
The al-Qaeda
funds, he added, went towards the purchase of a Mitsubishi L300, used as a car
bomb outside a crowded nightclub in Bali's Kuta resort.
"Apart
from that, the funding was also used to purchase the material for manufacturing
bombs, two motorbikes, renting a house, and also the living costs for members
of the Bali bomb terrorist network," Idris said.
His
testimony echoes the one given by a fellow witness, Ali Imron, who is the
younger brother of Mukhlas. Imron told the court Thursday that Mukhlas had
received the money personally from the al-Qaeda leader.
"In
2001, while my brother was in Afghanistan, he met Osama bin Laden and carried
back $30,000 in order to carry out amaliah jihad in Southeast Asia," said
Imron, who received a life sentence in 2003 for his role in the plot.
Mukhlas—also known as Ali Ghufron—and another brother of Imron’s, Amrozi, were
executed in January 2003.
Much of the
focus in the Patek trial has been on whether the defendant, who has admitted to
mixing the bombs used in the Bali attack, was culpable for how they were used.
Patek, a 42-year-old former operative with the Jemaah Islamiyah extremist
network, has denied that he knew the details concerning the bomb plot.
He faces six
charges, including premeditated murder, in connection with the Bali bombings
and attacks carried out against six Jakarta churches on Christmas Eve in 2000,
as well as identification fraud and illegal possession of firearms and
explosives. Having fled the country in 2003, he was apprehended in January 2011
in Pakistan and sent back to Indonesia to face justice.
If
convicted, he could face the death penalty.
Key
witnesses have corroborated charges that he mixed the deadly chemical cocktails
that were detonated in the attacks. On Monday, Idris said that on one occasion
when he came to deliver food to the house where the bombers were staying, he
saw Patek mixing the explosive materials.
"I
actually only saw it for a second and was not sure what kind of material that
was mixed by Patek because I did not see the substance that was mixed. However
I did see that the explosive material, which was sent from Lamongan [in East
Java], had been opened," Idris said.
On Thursday,
Imron said Patek appeared to express hesitation after a mishap that occurred as
the group moved a filing cabinet containing the lethal stew.
"Amrozi,
who was joking around or actually annoyed, dragged the filing cabinet instead
of lifting it up," he said. "It caused explosive materials, which
were scattered on the floor, to rub against each other and cause an explosion
inside the house."
After the incident,
Imron said, Patek interrupted the others and said "perhaps it is a sign we
must not bomb."