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Indonesia Terror Suspect Denies Jihad Was Motive In Attempt to Poison Police
Agus Triyono | February 08, 2012

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nonredneck
4:02pm Feb 8, 2012

Obviously shytln, most are,without it any ideologies can never thrive.When parasites has taken over a brain,it will automatically take full control of the host,instructing it to do all activities which serves only to strengthen &secure lifetime sustainance in the host brain.The host(in full control of the parasite)will in turn embrace this new ideology by spreading it further & wider,even willing to kill others &die for the ideology parasite.This is evident in all forms of religions(even the tibetan monks), communist &capitalist pure form, japanese pre-WW2, nazi fascist, north korea's god.Blocking the brain from exposures to any of these ideologies is almost impossible to do.Ironically,the most effective way to block others,is to infect the brain with only one specific strain & strengthen its hold,thereby preventing others to take hold.Education takes these parasite into a lab,combining it with others,leting it merged & evolve to ensure only the good & useful attributes grows dominant.


shytallnight
12:31pm Feb 8, 2012

Proof that most of these people are brain-dead sheep.


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Jihad might be a word that drives some militant Muslims to commit suicide bombings, but terror defendant Paimin, a.k.a. Joni Gondrong, claimed in his trial on Tuesday that he was not sure of the meaning of the word.

Paimin, together with three other members of his group, has been accused of trying to poison police officers in Kemayoran, Central Jakarta, last year. However, he claimed to not know the word “jihad.”

“I don’t know the meaning of that [word]. I just try to earn a living here,” he told the Central Jakarta District Court on Tuesday.

Paimin, Santhanam Wartoyo, Jumarto, a.k.a. Qomarudin, and Budi Supriyadi were arrested by the anti-terrorism squad Densus 88 after trying to put poison in the food of a canteen in the Kemayoran police station last year.

Paimin said that it was Santhanam who persuaded him to join the group, saying that as a Muslim he had to perform jihad, or engage in holy war.

“But who is the enemy of Allah? I didn’t know,” Paimin said.

Santhanam allegedly told him that the police were one of the enemies because they treated Muslim fighters badly in prisons.

“Santhanam told me that when he visited a terrorist convict in a prison, the police had been mean to defenders of Islam. That’s why the police should become a target,” Paimin said.

Santhanam ordered Paimin, a former noodle seller, to make poison to be distributed to a number of police station canteens across Jakarta, Central Java, East Java and Central Sulawesi, with the first target the Kemayoran police station’s canteen.

Paimin said he made the poison from jatropha seeds and other materials that he bought from Cakung, East Java, and put it into a mineral water bottle to be distributed.

“However, we didn’t have a chance to test the poison because we were arrested,” he said.

Police said that the laboratory test on Paimin’s concoction showed it was dangerous to human life.

Upon his arrest, Paimin discovered Santhanam had lied to him about the police’s treatment of Muslims.

“There was nothing bad in the way they treated me,” he said.