Firefighters attempt to extinguish the blaze ignited by a bomb blast at the Sari night club on Kuta Beach, on the island of Bali, Indonesia, early Sunday morning, Oct. 13, 2002. Nearly 200 people, mostly foreign tourists, were killed after bomb attacks on Indonesia's popular resort island late Saturday night.
Police officers inspect the ruins. The destruction started when a small homemade bomb exploded outside Paddy's Discotheque in the maze of clubs and bars on Kuta Beach. Shortly afterward, a huge blast from a bomb in a Toyota Kijang, a jeep-like vehicle, 30 yards down the street devastated the crowded Sari Club, a surfers' hangout.
Residents gather at a makeshift morgue in Denpasar, Oct. 13, 2002.
Police officers, emergency workers, and others survey the ruins of the Sari club. A third bomb exploded about 109 yard from the U.S. consular office in Denpasar, the capital of Bali, said Lt. Col. Yatim Suyatno, a police spokesman.
An unidentified man checks dead bodies wrapped in a plastic bag at a hospital in Denpasar, Bali, Oct, 14, 2002.
A police officer carries floral wreaths to the site of the ruins. The victims of the bombs include citizens of the U.S., Australia, Canada, Britain, Germany and Sweden.
Lists of injured, missing and deceased are hung at a hospital in Denpasar. Identification of the dead was proceeding slowly because many of the victims were burned beyond recognition.
Indonesian women weep as they wait to identify the remains of a friend, Oct. 14, 2002.
Indonesian soldiers in front of empty coffins secure the area at a hospital in Denpasar, Oct, 14, 2002.
A police officer stands guard at the area of the ruins. The explosions and fire damaged about 20 buildings and devastated much of the block.
Unidentified foreign tourists carry their luggage pass the site of a bomb blast. The airport at Bali's city of Depasar was thronged by stunned, mostly young travelers cutting short their vacations and desperately looking for flights home.
An Indonesian Police forensics team arrives at the scene. Indonesia's defense minister blamed al Qaeda and its extremist allies on Monday for the massive bomb attack.
Security guards use metal detectors to search flowers placed outside the Australian Embassy in Jakarta on Monday, Oct. 14, 2002. Many of the victims were tourists from Australia.
An Injured man walks the corridor of a hospital in Denpasar, Oct. 13, 2002. More than 300 people were injured in the attacks.
A severely injured victim of the bomb blasts is wheeled into the Royal Darwin Hospital in Darwin, Australia, after being airlifted from the Indonesian island Monday morning, Oct. 14, 2002. He and other Australian, Canadian, British and U.S. victims were on the second RAAF aircraft that flew from Bali to Australia.
Women light candles on a beach in memory of friends who died in the bomb explosion.