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Blast Targets Australian Embassy in Jakarta

The force of the blast badly mangled the security perimeter around the embassy (Click to watch more pictures)

JAKARTA, Sept 9 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) – At least eight people were killed and more than 100 injured Thursday, September 9, in a massive blast outside the Australian Embassy in Jakarta.

Australian Foreign Minister Alexander Downer described the blast as a terrorist attack against the country. Jakarta 's police chief said the blast was possibly caused by a suicide car bombing.

Indonesian officials confirmed a bomb had caused the blast, which follows alerts by the United States and Australia warning that extremists blamed for other attacks in Indonesia could strike again, according to Agence France-Presse (AFP).

Officials at hospitals in Jakarta confirmed eight fatalities from Thursday's blast and at least 99 injured. A list of casualties issued by the hospital showed up to five foreigners were among the injured.

The explosion at around 10:30 am (0330 GMT) prompted the immediate evacuation of the embassy and caused a sharp drop of nearly four percent on the Jakarta stock market.

Witnesses said a police truck and a taxi in front of the embassy had been blown apart and the high steel fence surrounding the building in the Kuningan business and residential district was damaged.

Downer said it was too early to know who was behind the attack.

Massive Destruction

A guard's post in front of the embassy was also destroyed by the bomb, which exploded just four meters (13 feet) from the embassy's gates.

The force of the blast punched windows out of nearby tower blocks and badly mangled the security perimeter around the embassy.

Reporters at the scene saw burning debris in the road outside the embassy, roughly 100 meters (yards) from the perimeter wall, as emergency services tried to extinguish flames and tend to the injured.

Speaking after Thursday's bombing, Australian Prime Minister John Howard said his country would not bow to terrorism.

"This is not a nation that is going to be intimidated by acts of terrorism. We are a strong, robust democracy," Howard told reporters in Melbourne .

In March, an attack on trains in Madrid just before a Spanish election was credited with causing the defeat of a conservative administration which had also allied itself with the United States over Iraq .

Australia votes in general elections on October 9 in which the conservative government's staunch support for the US invasion of Iraq , to which it contributed troops, and the US-led "war on terror" are key issues.

The US-led invasion of Iraq has increased sentiments against the United States and other countries who sent troops for the offensive, including Australia .

Indonesia is the world’s largest Muslim country, with population of over 200 million Muslims.

Deliberate Strike

Howard said his country would not bow to terrorism (AFP)

Downer, who is due to fly into Jakarta later Thursday, said the "very large" bomb attack was a deliberate strike on Australian interests.

"It is clearly a terrorist attack, it was outside the Australian embassy, you would have to conclude that it was directed towards Australia ," Downer told reporters in Adelaide .

Downer said it was still unclear whether the bombing, which came two days before the third anniversary of the September 11 attacks, was a suicide bombing like previous attacks on the Jakarta Marriott hotel and in Bali .

But Indonesia 's police chief said the car bombing at the embassy is believed to be the work of the same group which staged deadly strikes in Bali and on the city's Marriott hotel.

Da'i Bachtiar told reporters at the scene of Thursday's blast that the incident bore the hallmarks of the October 2002 Bali blasts and the August 2003 Marriott attack, both carried out by the ghostly "Jemaah Islamiyah".

Some 202 people, among them 88 Australians, died in the suicide attacks on Bali nightclubs while 12 people perished in the suicide strike on the US-franchised Marriott.

Both Australia and the United States last week raised new warnings urging their citizens to avoid Western hotels in Jakarta . The warnings reminded citizens to defer non-essential travel to the Southeast Asian archipelago.

Islamic scholars had slammed the Bali bombings, assuring it had nothing to do with Islam.

Prominent moderate Muslim scholar Sheikh Yusuf Al-Qaradawi had branded the bombing as a heinous crime "which is no more than a total barbarism that is void of morality and human feeling as well."

Islamic societies and groups in Indonesia had also lashed out at the blasts, warning of the negative consequences it may have on Indonesian Muslims.

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