JAKARTA (Reuters) - Renewed trouble in Indonesia's central Sulawesi island, long the site of deadly Christian-Muslim rivalry, underscores how communal tensions may help reinvigorate the country's militant Islamic movement.
The latest violence, on January 22, began with a police raid in the city of Poso on Muslim militants suspected of attacks on local Christians, including the 2005 beheadings of three schoolgirls.
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