The 12 October 2002 bombings have been blamed on Jemaah Islamiah (JI), - a south-east Asian militant group which is said to have links with Osama Bin Laden's al-Qaeda network. For those of us who are convinced that 9/11 was an inside job, and who are aware that Al Qaeda has been used by the CIA in several destabilization exercises (e.g., Kosovo), any incident blamed on Al Qaeda can only raise suspicion. Particularly when, as in these Bali bombings, the incident benefits only one agenda: the agenda of those who are pursuing the so-called 'War on Terrorism'. rkm -------------------------------------------------------- http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/world/asia-pacific/4300274.stm Nineteen killed in Bali bombings A series of bomb attacks on the Indonesian resort island of Bali has killed at least 19 people. Many others were injured in at least three blasts which took place just before 2000 local time (1200 GMT). Two blasts went off at Jimbaran - a seaside area packed with restaurants. Another was at Kuta beach, the area most popular with Western tourists. In October 2002, bomb attacks blamed on Islamic extremists killed 202 people in Kuta, among them many foreign tourists. Local TV has been showing pictures of people with terrible injuries and collapsed buildings. Indonesian foreign ministry spokesman Marty Natalegawa told the BBC the explosions happened within about 10 minutes of one another. A British tourist who was in a building next door to a restaurant that was hit in Kuta said there was a "thunderous boom" that caused all the shop's windows to blow out. "It was just chaos," Daniel Martin told the BBC. He said there were people lying in the streets with serious injuries, with everyone pitching in to help. Journalist Maris Bakkalupulo went to the scene of the Kuta blast, and saw a noodle shop that had been badly damaged. "It's completely gutted," she told the BBC. "Everything has been blasted out of the building, which is very mangled." The Australian Foreign Minister, Alexander Downer, has said at least one Australian was killed and three injured. A hospital official told Reuters news agency that at least 35 wounded foreigners had been taken to the island's main hospital. However he was unable to say whether foreigners were among the dead. Indonesia's President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has condemned the blasts, Reuters news agency reports. His spokesman said he was heading to the island. Local media said the police had found a number of other unexploded devices. Warnings The blasts come less than two weeks before the third anniversary of bomb attacks that killed 202 people - many of them foreigners holidaying in Bali. The 12 October 2002 bombings have been blamed on Jemaah Islamiah (JI), - a south-east Asian militant group which is said to have links with Osama Bin Laden's al-Qaeda network. JI is also suspected of being behind a suicide bombing at the Marriott hotel in Jakarta that killed 11 people in 2003, and a suicide bombing at the Australian embassy last September in which eight people were killed. The BBC's Tim Johnston in Jakarta says the authorities had warned that militants had been planning further attacks on Western targets in Indonesia, although there had been no particular alerts over the past few days. Did you witness the explosions? Send us your eyewitness accounts. If you have images please send them to •••@••.••• © BBC MMV -- http://cyberjournal.org "Apocalypse Now and the Brave New World" http://www.cyberjournal.org/cj/rkm/Apocalypse_and_NWO.html