2000 Philippine Consulate bombing | |
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Location | Jakarta, Indonesia |
Date | August 1, 2000 12:30 p.m. (UTC+7) |
Target | Official residence of Filipino Ambassador to Indonesia |
Attack type
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Car bomb or other improvised explosive device |
Deaths | 2 |
Non-fatal injuries
|
21 |
Perpetrators | Unknown, purportedly Jemaah Islamiyah agents |
The 2000 Philippine consulate bombing occurred on 1 August 2000 in Menteng, Jakarta, Indonesia. A bomb was detonated outside the official residence of the Philippine ambassador to Indonesia, Leonides Caday, killing two and injuring 21 others. Those killed were a female street vendor and a guard to the official residence. Ambassador Leonides Caday was treated in hospital for head and hand injuries.
Some witnesses suggested the 12:30 p.m. blast came from the envoy's vehicle and detonated as it entered the residence on Imam Bonjol Street. However, police investigators theorized that another car parked near the entrance contained the bomb, which was detonated as the ambassador's Mercedes entered his driveway.
The lunchtime blast caused numerous shrapnel wounds and at least four bystanders were taken to Jakarta hospitals with critical injuries. The car carrying the Philippine ambassador to Indonesia was destroyed and there was damage to dozens of other vehicles on the street that houses several government offices and the homes of other foreign diplomats and senior government officials. A wing of the official residence and the office of Indonesia's national electoral commission were both moderately damaged.
In response Alexander Aguirre, national security adviser to then President Joseph Estrada, stated the bombing was the first time a Philippine diplomatic post had been bombed and that the Philippine government "didn't expect that to happen."
Then Indonesian President Abdurrahman Wahid stated he believed the bombing was linked to the Philippine government's efforts to combat Islamist rebel groups in Mindanao, however the Moro Islamic Liberation Front released a statement denying it had set the bomb. Abu Sayyaf, another group opposed to the Philippine government, did not claim responsibility either.