JAKARTA (AFP) — Indonesian security forces were on high alert Monday after the execution of three Islamists over the 2002 Bali bombings, amid fears of a violent extremist backlash, police said.
"We're still on alert for any security disturbances after the executions," national police spokesman Abubakar Nataprawira told AFP, saying the readiness level was at its highest.
Indonesia stepped up security at tourist spots and embassies ahead of the execution of the bombers behind the 2002 attacks on the resort island of Bali which killed 202 people, mostly foreigners.
Amrozi, his brother Mukhlas, and Imam Samudra were executed by firing squad shortly after midnight on Sunday on a prison island off southern Java.
Their funerals in their home villages turned into rallies for hundreds of supporters and Islamic extremists bent on jihad or "holy war" with the West, even though the vast majority of Indonesian Muslims are moderates.
Police have arrested at least two of the bombers' sympathisers for making bomb threats, the Detikcom news website reported.
"At least two people have been arrested outside Jakarta. They said the threats were carried out as they opposed the execution of the terrorists," Jakarta's police chief was quoted as saying, without going into detail.
The Australian and US embassies have received bomb threats, along with shopping centres and hotels.
Australia, which lost 88 nationals in the Bali attacks and had its embassy here car-bombed in 2004, has warned against unnecessary travel to Indonesia. The United States has told citizens in the country to keep a "low profile."
Several senior militants from the Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) regional terror network, which was allegedly behind the Bali carnage, remain at large in Indonesia.
They are believed to include Malaysian-born former accountant Noordin Mohammad Top, an alleged terrorist recruiter and the self-proclaimed leader of a group called Al-Qaeda for the Malay Archipelago.
Until the end, the bombers expressed no remorse for their "infidel" victims and claimed they wanted to die as "martyrs" for their dream of an Islamic caliphate spanning much of Southeast Asia.
Sentenced in 2003 , they launched at least four failed legal challenges which delayed their executions and kept them in the media spotlight.
Hundreds of supporters briefly clashed with police as the bodies of Mukhlas and Amrozi -- the latter dubbed the "smiling assassin" for his courtroom antics -- arrived by helicopter at their village of Tenggulun, east Java, on Sunday.
Hardline cleric Abu Bakar Bashir, the co-founder of Jemaah Islamiyah who was jailed on a conspiracy charge related to the bombings before being released in 2006, led prayers at the brothers' burial service.
There were similar scenes in the west Java town of Serang as Samudra's body was paraded to the graveyard, shrouded in a black cloth bearing a Koranic inscription in Arabic.
"There'll probably be retaliation. What is clear is that no drop of Muslim blood is free. It has consequences," said Ganna, 26, who travelled from Jakarta to Serang to show his support.
The vast majority of Indonesian Muslims had little sympathy for the militants and are embarrassed by the extremists' behaviour.
The head of the country's top Islamic body, the Indonesian Council of Ulamas, said Sunday the bombers could not be considered "martyrs."
"Someone who killed others will not die as a martyr unless they waged a war in the name of religion. They were not fighting for religion," Umar Shihab said.
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