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Persecution
October 29,
2005
Three Indonesian
girls beheaded
By Tim Johnston
BBC News, Jakarta
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Three girls have been beheaded
and another badly injured as they walked to a Christian school in
Indonesia.
They were walking through a
cocoa plantation near the city of Poso in central Sulawesi province when
they were attacked.
This is an area that has a long
history of religious violence between Muslims and Christians.
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A government-brokered truce has only
partially succeeded in reducing the number of incidents in recent years.
Police say the heads were found some
distance from the bodies.
It is unclear what was behind the
attack, but the girls attended a private Christian school and one of the heads
was left outside a church leading to speculation that it might have had a
religious motive.
Islamic state
Central Sulawesi and Poso in particular
was the scene of bitter fighting between Muslims and Christians in 2001 and
2002.
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More than 1,000 people were killed
before a government-brokered truce.
Although the violence has been
subdued, it has never gone away completely.
A bomb in May in the nearby town of
Tentena, which is predominantly Christian, killed 22 people and injured over
30.
The fighting four years ago drew
Islamic militants from all over Indonesia and many have never gone home.
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Analysts say the militants have targeted
central Sulawesi and believe that it could be turned into the foundation stone
of an Islamic state.
The analysts have warned that the
violence could resurface at any time.
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