
Prosecutors had demanded that Bashir be sentenced to life in prison.
Bashir's organization Jamaat Tawhid Anshoru, or JAT, issued a statement saying it rejected the verdict because "it's based on laws formulated by infidels."
"The authorities take repressive actions and intimidate clerics and Muslims, using the war on terrorism as a reason. If this is allowed to continue, it is not impossible for Muslims to be slaughtered." Authorities deployed 3,000 security personnel around Jakarta, most of them stationed in the area around the courthouse, said Jakarta police spokesman Col. Baharudin Djafar.
About 500 Bashir supporters were outside the court listening to the proceedings. Banners saying "Free Ustadz Abu Bakar Ba'asyir" hung on the courthouse's fence.
It was the third trial of the fiery Bashir, who was most recently detained in August for suspected links to a militant training camp that was raided by authorities in Aceh in early 2010.
Police have said Bashir and his organization were involved in setting up the camp, and authorities have said militants were preparing to launch assassination attempts on Indonesian government officials.
Authorities also accuse Bashir of plotting attacks like the 2008 Mumbai, India, assault on hotels and a train station that left hundreds dead in a siege lasting several days.
He denies the charges, and has often said there is a U.S.-led conspiracy to put him behind bars.
In the past, authorities have tried but failed to directly link Bashir to major terror attacks in Indonesia.
In the first two trials, prosecutors tried to directly link him to the 2002 bombings in Bali and the 2003 J.W. Marriott bomb attack in Jakarta. The courts found him guilty of relatively minor charges. He was released in June 2006, after serving 25 months in jail.
Known
for his inflammatory rhetoric, Bashir was accused of being the
spiritual leader of Indonesia's homegrown terror network, Jemaah
Islamiyah, who inspired many of those involved in the bombings.
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