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Azahari Husin

Azahari Husin (Source: Royal Malaysia Police)

Dr. Azahari bin Husin (born September 14, 1957 – died November 9, 2005) was a
Malaysian terrorist and Islamic terrorist who was believed to be the technical mastermind
behind the 2002 Bali bombing and other Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) terrorist attacks. He was
killed in a police raid on his hideout in Indonesia in 2005. He was nicknamed the
"Demolition Man".

History

Husin was an engineer with a Ph.D. in property valuation from University of Reading,
and was a lecturer at Universiti Teknologi Malaysia. He was awarded scholarship by the
Malaysian Government to study in Australia for four years in the 1970s. Like many
Malaysian students of the period, he was drawn to the cause of political Islam
popularised by the Iranian revolution. He attended Norwood High school, now known as
Norwood Morialta High School in the mid 1970s.

Later he received extensive bomb training in Afghanistan. He authored the JI bomb


manual, used in the Bali bombing and the 2003 Marriott Hotel bombing. He also planned
the 2004 Jakarta embassy bombing and was implicated in the 2005 Bali bombings. Prior
to his death, he was one of the most wanted men in Indonesia along with Noordin
Mohammed Top.

In July 2004, Azahari and Noordin narrowly escaped a police raid on a rented house west
of Jakarta, where forensic experts later found traces of explosives used in the embassy
bombing. Neighbours described both as reclusive men who left the property only to pray
at a nearby mosque; and they said that before the bombing, they saw the duo loading
heavy boxes into a white delivery van which is the same type used in that attack.

Before the Marriott Hotel bombing, Azahari is known to have stayed with Asmar Latin
Sani, the suspected Marriott suicide bomber, at his home in Bengkulu on the island of
Sumatra.

Both men were close associates of Jemaah Islamiyah's former operational chief, Riduan
Isamuddin (better known as Hambali), who was captured in Thailand in 2003.[1]

Death

On 9 November 2005, Indonesian police, acting on a tip-off, located Husin. They


conducted a raid on one of his hideouts in Batu, near Malang in East Java with
Detachment 88 operators sent to assist regular police officers. Three suspected jihadist
terrorists barricaded themselves inside a house and they put up stiff resistance, throwing
grenades and firing bullets at the police outside. This was followed by a series of
explosions, one of which was a suicide blast by his assistant setting off his bomb vest.
Police identified the intact corpse of Azahari, with a bullet wound in his chest. Husin was
shot and killed by a police sniper, after which one of his disciples blew himself up to
prevent him from being taken alive.

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