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Jakarta Attacks: At Least 4 Dead in Gun and Bomb Attacks in Indonesian Capital

Body bags cover victims outside a traffic police outpost as officers secure the area after a series of explosions hit central Jakarta on January 14, 2016. (Credit: Romeo Gacad/AFP/Getty Images)

At least four people, including a policeman, are dead after militants carried out a series of apparently coordinated gun and bomb attacks in the heart of the Indonesian capital of Jakarta.

Authorities fear the toll will rise.

There have so far been no claims of responsibility, but one analyst likened the timed attacks to the Paris massacre where ISIS struck several locations at the same time.

The attack is the first major one in Jakarta since the 2009 simultaneous attacks on the J.W. Marriott and Ritz Carlton hotels, which killed seven.

With the operation to contain the attackers still going on, several things were unclear: Exactly how many gunmen were involved, and how many locations they struck.

Embassy advisory

The U.S. Embassy in Jakarta asked Americans to stay away from the area, saying the “situation continues to unfold.”

One of the targets of the Thursday attacks was a police station, next to a busy shopping center, the Sarinah Thamrin Plaza.

Gunmen used grenades and engaged in a firefight with officers, Indonesian National Police spokesman Anton Charliyan said.

The dead comprised of an officer and three civilians, police said.

A Starbucks coffee shop in the nearby Skyline Building appeared to have been another target. The windows of the cafe had been blown out.

Amateur video, posted on Twitter, appears to have caught one of the explosions outside the shop.

Ongoing situation

Police poured into the Skyline Building, looking for other gunmen.

“You couldn’t get much more central in Jakarta if you tried. It’s basically right smack dab in the central business area,” said Jeremy Douglas, who works in the U.N. Office on Drugs and Crime, located in the area.

“If you wanted to make an impact, and get visibility for what you’re trying to do, this is the place to do it.”

Christian Hubel, a witness, told CNN he and his colleagues heard five or six explosions in succession. Their office building was locked down.

“It looks like the whole street, the whole location is still locked down. Nobody’s moving to the scene,” he said. “A lot of police, rescue cars are parked there. But nobody’s moving, so it seems as if it’s still going on.”

Echoes of Paris

CNN security analyst Bob Baer, said the attack bears the signature of ISIS.

It “sounds like the Paris attack to me,” Baer said. A lot of these fighters are getting combat experience in Iraq and Syria, many of whom have experience handling and detonating explosives, he said.

Indonesia is the most populous Muslim country in the world but it has a secular government. That has made it a ripe target for extremists. And ISIS’ high-profile extremism has gained it a small following there.

The biggest worry is Indonesians fighting in Syria and Iraq will return home with the training and combat experience

In recent weeks, police have been on high alert, while military operations focus on hitting the East Indonesian Mujahadeen, which has pledged support for ISIS.

On Thursday, Indonesian President Joko Widodo said the nation will remain unbowed after the attacks.

“We should not be afraid and defeated by acts of terror like this,” he said.

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