A landmark reconciliation meeting between survivors of terror attacks and the perpetrators will be held in Indonesia this month, Jakarta said Monday. The government did not release the names of the militants or the family members of those killed in such attacks that would participate. The largest terror bomb in Indonesia happened in Indonesian tourist island of Bali on 12 October 2002, leaving 202 people dead. Among those killed at Paddy’s Irish Bar and the nearby Sari Club were people from 21 countries, including 88 Australians, 38 Indonesians and 28 Britons. A proposal to mandate an ongoing anti-terrorism role for Indonesia’s military has met with opposition from a range of lawyers and academics as well as human rights activists. A central contention is that the military would be more likely than police to use violent methods of suppression rather than to arrest and prosecute suspects.