more news as it comes but:
Deadly blasts rip through Bali again
Explosions rocked the Indonesian tourist island of Bali last night, leaving at least 23 people dead and dozens wounded.
Witnesses said they saw body parts, including a severed head and a leg, and hospitals filled with injured.
Many foreigners were among those killed. The Foreign Affairs Minister, Alexander Downer, said at least one Australian was confirmed dead.
The blasts at Jimbaran beach and a bustling outdoor shopping centre in downtown Kuta "were clearly the work of terrorists'', Police Major General Ansyaad Mbai, a top Indonesian anti-terrorism official, told the Associated Press.
Komang, a receptionist at the Graha Asih Hospital, close to Jimbaran Bay, said there were at least eight people in the morgue and that doctors were treating at least 13 wounded.
"It's a horrible scene,'' she said. "Some people have had their heads blown off.''
The bombs went off almost simultaneously at about 7.30pm local time (9.30pm Sydney time).
The blasts hit two restaurants that were packed with foreign and Indonesian diners.
I Wayan Kresna said he witnessed the first bomb at a seafood restaurant on Jimbaran beach. He counted at least two dead and said many others were taken to hospital.
"I helped lift up the bodies,'' he told the privately run El Shinta radio.
"There was blood everywhere.''
The other explosion hit the Raja restaurant in a bustling outdoor shopping centre at Kuta.
All floors of the three-storey building were badly damaged in the blast, an AP reporter at the scene said.
The exact number of blasts was not clear. Some witnesses said they heard at least two explosions at each location, but it was not clear if they were separate blasts or echoes.
Bali police chief general Made Mangu Pastika arrived at the scene last night to tour the area around Raja's bar and restaurant.
The sister of convicted drug smuggler Schapelle Corby told AAP that most of the injured had been taken to Graha Asih Hospital, near Kuta.
Up to four people had died there as she watched, Mercedes Corby said, while between 30 and 40 others had been injured.
Another witness said body parts had littered the area around the Raja restaurant.
"I heard one explosion and ran to Raja's,'' the operations manager of the Matahari Department Store, Marthinus Parera told AAP.
"I ran inside and saw many injured and I found one man's head near the kitchen."
"I also found a leg and a man's body.''
Authorities said several blast victims were moved to Sanglah Hospital in Denpasar, where the Australian Government built a specialist burns unit following the 2002 attacks, blamed on al-Qaeda-linked terror organisation Jemaah Islamiah.
Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono was heading to the island last night, his spokesman said.
"The president strongly condemns this criminal act. At this moment, the president is at the airport (in Jakarta),'' spokesman Andi Mallarangeng told El Shinta radio.
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25 die as terror hits Bali again
AT least 25 people have been killed, including one Australian, in a series of near-simultaneous terrorist bombings on the Indonesian island of Bali.
Unconfirmed reports say the death toll is higher than 30.
Australian Federal Police and US Federal Bureau of Investigation officers are at the bomb sites to inspect the scene.
Foreign Minister Alexander Downer said least three other Australians had been injured in the blasts, warning the number could rise.
Bali's hospitals are reportedly struggling to cope with the number of injured from the blasts, which police say struck seafood restaurants 100m apart in the beachside area of Jimbaran about 7.30pm (9.30pm AEST) yesterday.
Minutes later at least one blast hit the Raja restaurant in Matahari Square in Kuta, a popular late-night shopping area, according to witnesses.
"Tragically we now know that there has been one Australian who has been killed and three others who have been injured," Mr Downer told ABC radio.
"But that is all we have at this stage. We're not sure if there have been other injuries or even fatalities amongst Australians.
"Our consular officials are still working very hard to try to find out."
He warned the number of dead and injured could rise significantly on the figures quoted in initial reports.
"We know from experience the numbers, unfortunately, could turn out to be a good deal higher," Mr Downer said.
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