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DINA
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October 13, 2003 Monday Sha'aban 16, 1424





Emotional ceremony for Bali victims


BALI, Oct 12: Heads bowed and weeping, survivors and families of last year’s bomb attacks on Indonesia’s Bali island paid tribute to the 202 people killed, as fresh warnings were issued that Muslim radicals could strike again.

Sunday was a day of remembrance in Australia too, where most of the victims were from.

Relatives clutched pictures of their loved ones as they joined 2,000 people at an early morning memorial service on a limestone escarpment overlooking Bali’s Kuta Beach, where Muslim militants blew up two nightclubs on this day a year ago.

Up to 800 at the Christian service were survivors and relatives, the majority from Australia, which lost 88 citizens in the worst act of terror since the September 11, 2001, strikes on the United States. In all, 22 countries lost people.

For many, the emotion of returning to this fabled tourist isle in recent days has been raw. There has also been defiance.

“If we didn’t come back they would have won. It goes to show they can’t beat the Australian spirit. We’ll keep on coming and sticking it up their face,” said Jason Madden, 31, who lost seven friends from Perth’s Kingsley Cats football team.

Hundreds of people also made the pilgrimage to the site where the Sari Club was once a beacon to good times but is now a shrine, dotted with scores of wreathes and flower bouquets.

Many sobbed as they read the messages of anguish from family and friends, or gazed at the photos of the dead pasted on a board that stretched the length of the empty lot.

Australian Prime Minister John Howard and leaders from Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim country, were among those at the memorial service.

Chief security minister Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono vowed to fight terrorism. About 40 people have been caught over the Bali blasts and 20 sentenced, including three to death.—Reuters






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