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Bayshir
"only answered queries about his name, health, age and
similar matters"
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JAKARTA,
November 2 (IslamOnline & News Agencies) – Suspect Abu Bakar
Bayshir was tight-lipped Saturday, November 2, as Indonesian police
began questioning him at a Jakarta hospital, one of his lawyers said.
Bayshir
replied only to basic personal questions delivered by a team of 10
detectives, Agence France-Presse (AFP) quoted lawyer Ahmad Michdan as
saying.
The
cleric made four demands before he would respond to questions related to
the criminal and terrorist allegations against him, Michdan said during
a short break in the session which began around 0730 GMT.
"Even
if he is a suspect he has the right to remain silent," Michdan
said.
Police
said they prepared some 50 questions for Bayshir but Michdan said he had
only answered queries about his name, health, age and similar matters.
He
said Bayshir refused to reply to inquiries related to what authorities
in Singapore and Malaysia allege are his ties to Jemaah Islamiyah (JI),
which foreign intelligence agencies consider a terror network.
Michdan
said Bayshir also refused to talk about his move to Malaysia many years
ago, or past brushes with the law in Indonesia.
The
Muslim cleric on Saturday demanded that police suspend his detention
status, Michdan said.
He
said Bayshir also demanded police bring to Indonesia Omar al-Faruq who
allegedly implicated Bayshir.
Bayshir
also wants police to apologize to Indonesian Muslim leaders and to a
Muslim hospital in Central Java which they damaged Monday as they tried
to bring him to Jakarta, Michdan said.
"We
have obtained a letter from the hospital confirming that he is healthy
and ready to be questioned today," lead investigator Jeldi Ramahdan
said before the interrogation began.
Saturday
night police remained behind closed doors with Bayshir despite his
demands.
Police
detained him on October 20 after they named him a suspect in a series of
bomb attacks on Indonesian churches in 2000.
He
is also accused of plotting to kill Megawati Sukarnoputri before she
became president.
Bayshir
denies all knowledge of JI which is now on the U.N. list of terrorist
organizations and which authorities allege is linked to al-Qaeda.
Indonesia
has been under intense international pressure to crack down on Islamic
groups following the October 12 bombing in Indonesia's resort island of
Bali, which killed more than 190 people.
Bayshir
is not a suspect in the Bali blast.
Detectives
have been waiting for Bayshir's health to improve before questioning
him.
He
collapsed last month but was in good health Saturday, Michdan said.
Vice-president
Hamzah Haz Saturday urged citizens not to become agitated over the
interrogation of Bayshir.
"This
is to find out whether or not there is a terrorist network in Indonesia,
so that the Islamic community becomes calm, and also so the
international community can know," he said at an Islamic boarding
school south of Jakarta.
"But
this doesn't mean that the person detained by police is guilty. The
courts, not the police, decide guilt," the Detikcom online news
service quoted Haz as saying.
Police
have not arrested any of three suspects they are hunting in connection
with the blast.
But
the head of the Indonesian police investigative team told AFP Saturday
they are questioning Mohammad Abdulah Djafar, a resident of Bali, who
has allegedly interfered in the police investigation.
"He
forbid others from becoming witnesses," Mangku Pastika said from
Bali.
The
man has not been detained and would probably be released later Saturday
while police continue to investigate the reasons for his behavior, said
Pastika, who is working with detectives from Australia and other
countries in a joint probe.
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