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Survivors of the Bali bombings and families of victims braved a fresh terrorism threat today to remember those killed in the terror atrocity.
Security was tight for the occasion a decade after bombs destroyed a holiday in paradise for tourists partying at two nightclubs near the beach in Bali.
More than 2,000 police and military, including snipers, were deployed to guard the memorial service after reports involving the "certain movement" of terrorists were announced two days earlier.
The 2002 bombing was Asia's deadliest terror strike, killing 202 people - including 28 Britons, 88 Australians and seven Americans - and injuring more than 240 on Indonesia's resort island.
The attack, carried out by the al Qaida-linked Jemaah Islamiyah group, started a wave of violence in the world's most-populous Muslim nation that hit an embassy, hotels and restaurants.
Some members of Jemaah Islamiyah were convicted over the bombings and three were executed by firing squad in 2008.
The security alert was raised to its highest level but no other details were released about the potential threat.
"The loss is not just giving us grief, it is also giving us the strength to fight terrorism and...