A group of terror attack survivors and traumatized relatives of those killed boycotted Indonesia’s first-ever meeting between former militants and their victims on Wednesday , marring an event hailed as a key step towards reconciliation. About 120 reformed militants are expected to apologize to dozens of victims including survivors of the 2002 Bali bombings and the 2004 bombing of the Australian Embassy in Jakarta, according to Irfan Idris, director of de-radicalization at Indonesia’s counterterrorism agency. Indonesia is no stranger to terrorism and, for five years, the world’s most populous Muslim country has implemented a successful de-radicalization program in its prisons. The program has a 95 per cent success rate according to the country’s counterterrorism agency.