Indonesia cop killed in knife attack by suspected militant

Police stand guard near the home of a suspected militant, following his arrest in Singosari District, Malang, Indonesia, in this June 19, 2017 file photo. Despite stepping up the fight against Islamic militants, Indonesia saw yet another attack on Sunday, this time at a police station where suspected extremists stabbed dead a police officer. Antara Foto/Ari Bowo Sucipto via REUTERS

JAKARTA – An Indonesian police officer was stabbed and later died of his wounds in an attack by suspected Islamist militants in the city of Medan, a police spokesman said on Sunday.

Police shot dead one suspect and one was arrested after the attack on a police post in the capital of North Sumatra province, police spokesman Rina Sari Ginting said by telephone.

The perpetrators had scaled the fence of the police post near police headquarters and shouted “Allahu Akbar” (God is greatest) before stabbing the officer, said Ginting.

The attack will compound fears about rising militancy in Indonesia, which has the world’s biggest Muslim population.

Islamic State sympathizers have carried out a series of mostly low-level attacks in Indonesia over the past few years.

National police spokesman Setyo Wasisto said authorities were investigating whether the attackers were inspired by Islamic State and acting on the instructions of Bahrun Naim, an Indonesian who went to fight for the militants in Syria.

There are fears across Southeast Asia that as Islamic State loses ground in the Middle East, it will seek footholds elsewhere.

Indonesian authorities have tightened security for this weekend’s Eid al-Fitr holiday marking the end of the fasting month of Ramadan.

Last month, a suicide bomb attack by Islamic State-inspired militants at a bus station in the capital, Jakarta, killing three police officers.

President Joko Widodo has urged parliament to accelerate plans to tighten anti-terrorism laws to meet new dangers, including giving police powers to detain suspects without trial for longer and to arrest people for hate speech or for spreading radical content and joining proscribed groups.

National police chief Tito Karnavian said last week about 40 suspected militants had been detained in recent weeks.

Indonesia together with ASEAN neighbors Malaysia and the Philippines have recently stepped up cooperation in the fight against extremists, including tri-country maritime border patrols, as Southeast Asia was stunned by the attack by some 500 extremists led by the IS-associated Maute Group in Marawi City in Mindanao on May 23.

Philippine authorities said dozens of foreign jihadists, including Indonesians and Malaysians, were believed fighting alongside the terror alliance led by Maute Group and including a unit of the Abu Sayyaf Group of Isnilon Hapilon, tagged the Islamic State’s “emir” for Southeast Asia.

The once-bustling Philippine city remains in a state of siege a month later, midpoint into the 60-day martial law declared by President Rodrigo Duterte in Mindanao. (With InterAksyon)

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