JAKARTA, Indonesia (AP) — Twenty-one suspected Islamist militants went on trial Thursday on charges of plotting attacks on foreign aid workers and others in Indonesia's Aceh province following a deadly tsunami.The defendants, who appeared in eight separate trials at the West Jakarta District Court, are among more than 100 suspects who have been rounded up or killed after the discovery of a new terror cell in February.Prosecutors said the defendants set up a military training camp in Aceh to prepare to fight "infidels."That was one of the reasons the province was chosen as a base for the new cell named "al-Qaida in Aceh," terror experts say. The cell reportedly consists of militants from several different regional terror networks, including Jemaah Islamiyah.Feritas, who like many Indonesians uses only one name, said the suspects planned to kill aid workers and attack churches, U.N. offices and all other Western symbols.One of the men facing trial is accused of shooting and injuring Erhard Bauer, a German Red Cross worker, in Aceh last year. He is also accused of throwing grenades at a U.N. Children's Fund office. No one was injured in that attack.Indonesia straddles a series of fault lines that make the vast island nation prone to volcanic and seismic activity. The giant quake that triggered the 2004 Indian Ocean tsunami killed 230,000 people, half of them in Aceh.
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