Indonesia Affirms Bali Bomb Suspect Arrested in Pakistan

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An alleged mastermind of the 2002 Bali bombings that killed more than 200 people has been arrested in Pakistan, an Indonesian counter-terrorism official said Wednesday.

"Umar Patek was arrested in Pakistan," the official told Agence France Presse on condition of anonymity, without giving details about where or how Tuesday's arrest was made.

There has been no immediate confirmation from authorities in Pakistan.

Indonesia's counter-terrorism police have been tracking Patek for years. One of the most wanted Islamic extremists in Southeast Asia, he has a $1 million bounty on his head under the U.S. government's "Rewards for Justice" program.

Born in 1970, he was the alleged field coordinator for the bombings of night clubs on the Indonesian resort island of Bali, which killed 202 people including 88 Australians.

Patek is a suspected member of al-Qaida-linked Southeast Asian terror network Jemaah Islamiyah (JI), blamed for a series of deadly bombings targeting Christians and Westerners in Indonesia dating back to 1999.

Indonesian authorities had believed he was hiding among Islamic rebels in the southern Philippines. The International Crisis Group, a think tank, reported in 2008 that he had become the commander of foreign jihadists there.

Police were investigating reports that Patek had returned to Indonesia early last year to join a new militant group being set up in Aceh province by another alleged Bali ringleader, Dulmatin.

Dulmatin was killed during a police raid in March, 2010.

"Umar Patek is a dangerous person. He's a bomb-making expert who teaches others how to assemble explosives. He's an operational leader of Jemaah Islamiyah," University of Indonesia security analyst Kusnanto Anggoro told AFP.

"And he uses his expertise and influence to cause harm to people and to incite hatred. It's a significant arrest," he added.

JI's goal is to unite Indonesia, Brunei, Malaysia, Singapore and the southern Philippines in an Islamic state governed by a strict interpretation of sharia law similar to Taliban-ruled Afghanistan.

The group has carried out more than 50 bombings in Indonesia that have claimed hundreds of lives, mainly Muslims, since April, 1999.

The last significant bombing in Indonesia -- the world's most populous Muslim-majority country -- killed seven people and two suicide bombers in two luxurious hotels in Jakarta in July, 2009.

It was believed to be the work of Malaysian terror mastermind Noordin Mohammad Top, who led a JI splinter group. Top was killed in September, 2009.