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Southeast Asia
Philippine, Indonesian police to set up DNA databank for al-Qaida-linked militants
2008-03-11
Philippine and Indonesian police are planning to set up a DNA databank to help rapidly identify captured or slain members of the al-Qaida-linked militant group Jemaah Islamiyah, a top police official said Monday.

National police chief Avelino Razon said the anti-terrorism project would be developed with Interpol's help and integrated into the police information systems of the two countries — both key U.S. anti-terrorism allies. "This will be a useful tool, and we want to have this as soon as possible," Razon said.

Razon said he discussed development of the databank with Indonesian officials on the sidelines of an international police conference in Hong Kong last week. Police in both countries will focus on obtaining DNA samples of the relatives of dozens of Jemaah Islamiyah members known to be hiding in the southern Philippines, he said.

The Indonesia-based militant group has been blamed for the 2002 nightclub bombings on Indonesia's resort island of Bali that killed 202 people. Two suspected Bali bombing plotters, Umar Patek and Dulmatin, are believed to have fled to the southern Philippines in 2003.

Philippine military officials believe Dulmatin, a master bombmaker whose wife identified him as Ammar Usman, may have been killed in a clash with government forces in the country's southernmost province of Tawi Tawi in January.

American and Philippine experts are conducting DNA tests to determine if the body was that of Dulmatin, who is believed to have been plotting terror attacks and training Filipino militants in the southern region of Mindanao.

Washington has offered a reward of US$10 million (€6.49 million) for Dulmatin's capture.

Police intelligence officers said the DNA tests are using tissue samples taken from Dulmatin's wife and six children, who were separately detained in Mindanao in 2006 and deported to Indonesia last year.

The Philippine military believes more than 40 other Jemaah Islamiyah members are hiding in Mindanao. It says the fighters went to Mindanao for combat and religious training and are too afraid to return home because of an anti-terror campaign in Indonesia
Posted by:Fred

#2  Here's hoping the DNA extraction is painful, and fatal.
Posted by: ed   2008-03-11 09:48  

#1  hopeful expectations, I like
Posted by: Waldemar Glineper7637   2008-03-11 09:44  

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