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Southeast Asia on alert after foiled plots

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JAKARTA/BANGKOK/SYDNEY: Southeast Asian security forces were on alert on Friday ahead of the Christmas and New Year holidays after two bomb plots were foiled in Australia and Indonesia and the arrest of suspected militants in Malaysia.


Australian police said on Friday they had prevented attacks on prominent sites in Melbourne on Christmas Day that authorities described as “an imminent terrorist event” inspired by IS.


Victoria Police chief commissioner Graham Ashton alleged those detained planned to use explosives, knives and guns to attack busy locations including Melbourne’s Flinders Street train station, Federation Square and St Paul’s Cathedral.


“Over the last fortnight... we have had to conduct a criminal investigation relating to the formation of what we believe was a terrorist plot,” he told a news conference.


“We believe that there was an intention to conduct what we call a multi-mode attack, possibly on Christmas Day.


The targets of the alleged attack are all in the same area in the heart of the city, and only a short distance from the Melbourne Cricket Ground where up to 100,000 people are expected to attend the Boxing Day Test between Australia and Pakistan.


Of the seven arrested on Friday morning, five remain in custody. All had been under surveillance for weeks.


Ashton said four of them were Australian-born, of Lebanese background, with the fifth an Egyptian-born Australian citizen, all in their 20s.


The decision to step up security came after an attack in Berlin in which a Tunisian suspect smashed through a Christmas market in a truck on Monday, killing 12 people.


In Indonesia, where IS’s first attack in Southeast Asia killed four people in Jakarta in January, at least 14 people were being interrogated over suspected suicide bomb plots targeting the presidential palace in Jakarta and another undisclosed location, police said.


Anti-terrorism police killed three suspects in a gunfight on Wednesday on the outskirts of Jakarta.


Indonesia would deploy 85,000 police and 15,000 military staff for the Christmas and New Year period, police said.


Moderate Indonesian Muslim groups were helping authorities secure Christmas celebrations amid heightened religious tension after the Christian governor of Jakarta, Basuki Tjahaja Purnama, went on trial suspected of blasphemy.


Hardline group IDF swept into shopping centres in Surabaya, East Java, last week to make sure Muslim staff were not forced by employers to wear Santa hats or other Christmas gear.


In West Java, a group stopped a Christmas event as it was being held in a public building rather than a church.


In Jakarta, around 300 volunteers from Nahdlatul Ulama, Indonesia’s biggest moderate group, will join police in overseeing security.


“The focus is (protecting) against terrorism, especially in Jakarta and Bali, because these are the traditional targets,” Indonesia police chief Tito Karnavian told reporters.


Police in Malaysia, where IS claimed responsibility for a grenade attack on a pub on the outskirts of Kuala Lumpur in June, said this week they had arrested seven people for suspected links to the militant group.


Police will monitor transport hubs, entertainment centres and other tourist hotspots.


“We try not to have too much physical presence in public and focus more on prevention,” Deputy Home Minister Nur Jazlan Mohamed said. “People should feel free to enjoy their holidays.”


Thailand plans to have more than 100,000 police on patrol until mid-January, police said, adding it was an increase from last year, without giving details.


Thailand’s deputy national police spokesman Kissana Phathancharoen said no intelligence pointed to a possible attack but “we will not let our guard down”.


Multi-ethnic Singapore, a major commercial, banking and travel hub that is home to many Western expatriates, will deploy police at tourist and shopping areas. A police advisory said bags and personal items may be checked.


A spokesman for the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Singapore said its churches had trained some members to watch out for people looking suspicious. — Reuters/AFP


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