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Indonesian jailed for Bali bomb | Indonesian jailed for Bali bomb |
(20 minutes later) | |
An Indonesian man has been found guilty of involvement in the 2005 Bali bombings and sentenced to 15 years. | An Indonesian man has been found guilty of involvement in the 2005 Bali bombings and sentenced to 15 years. |
Former mobile phone salesman Anif Solchanudin, 24, was found guilty of helping to plan the attacks. | Former mobile phone salesman Anif Solchanudin, 24, was found guilty of helping to plan the attacks. |
The judge said Solchanudin was "proven without doubt to have participated in acts of terrorism". | The judge said Solchanudin was "proven without doubt to have participated in acts of terrorism". |
Three other people have already been sentenced in connection with the triple suicide blasts, which killed 20 people and injured more than 100 others. | Three other people have already been sentenced in connection with the triple suicide blasts, which killed 20 people and injured more than 100 others. |
Solchanudin admitted during his trial that he had been interested in becoming a suicide bomber. | |
But he had denied knowing anything about the bombings before they took place. | But he had denied knowing anything about the bombings before they took place. |
Noordin | |
Solchanudin is the fourth man to be jailed over the attacks. | |
Earlier this month, Mohammad Cholily was found guilty of supplying equipment and jailed for 18 years. | |
Dwi Widyarto was found to have helped produce a disc of Noordin Mohammad Top, the plot's alleged mastermind and South East Asia's most wanted militant. | |
Noordin: Most-wanted militant | |
Another man, Abdul Aziz, was jailed for eight years for sheltering Noordin, and Solchanudin was also found guilty of concealing information about him. | |
The October 2005 attacks were the second major bombing on the resort island. | The October 2005 attacks were the second major bombing on the resort island. |
In 2002, more than 200 people died in the bombing of a bar and nightclub in Bali. | In 2002, more than 200 people died in the bombing of a bar and nightclub in Bali. |
The Indonesian government blamed the regional Islamist militant group, Jemaah Islamiah, for both attacks. | The Indonesian government blamed the regional Islamist militant group, Jemaah Islamiah, for both attacks. |
Noordin Top is wanted in connection with both attacks, as well as a string of others in Indonesia. | Noordin Top is wanted in connection with both attacks, as well as a string of others in Indonesia. |
Noordin was previously believed to be one of al-Qaeda-linked Jemaah Islamiah's key financiers and recruiters but analysts now think he may have broken away to form a new militant group. | |
The man thought to have been his closest ally, bomb maker Azahari Husin, was killed during a police raid in November 2005, but successive attempts to locate Noordin have failed. |