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Indonesia seeks lethal revenge against ISIS Aman Abdurrahaman, Islamic
State's imprisoned spiritual leader, could face the death penalty as state
stiffens its resolve against terrorism

By John McBeth <http://www.atimes.com/writer/john-mcbeth/> Jakarta, May 21,
2018 2:48 PM (UTC+8)


[image: Aman Abdurrahman in a file photo. Photo: AFP/Bay Ismoyo]Aman
Abdurrahman in a file photo. Photo: AFP/Bay Ismoyo


State prosecutors demanded last week to put Islamic State (ISIS) spiritual
leader Aman Abdurrahman to death over his role in a January 2016 gun and
bomb rampage in central Jakarta and four other attacks points to a tougher
approach to those who seek to inspire terrorism in Indonesia.

Abdurrahman was behind bars at the supposed maximum security Nusakambangan
island prison when he allegedly issued video instructions to an ISIS
gathering in East Java to launch a terrorist strike similar to that in
Paris that claimed 130 lives in November 2015.

According to testimony at Abdurrahman’s ongoing trial, detailed directives
were then passed on by fellow militant Iwan Darmawan Muntho, 41, who was
already on Nusakambangan’s death row for his active role in the bombing of
the Australian embassy in Jakarta in 2004.

Originally planned for central Jakarta’s Sabang shopping center, but later
switched to a major intersection nearby, the first ISIS operation in
Indonesia left eight people dead, including four militants, and even
brought the army out on the street.

“We couldn’t find anything that might soften his sentence,” said a
statement from prosecutors, pointing to Abdurrahman’s status as a
recidivist who has twice been jailed for terrorist offenses and describes
Indonesia as a nation of kafirs, or unbelievers.

[image: Indonesian armed police escort Indonesian radical cleric Aman
Abdurrahman (C) into the South Jakarta courtroom in Jakarta on February 15,
2018, during his first appearance over his role in a 2016 suicide
bombing.Abdurrahman, who is considered the de facto leader of all Islamic
State (IS) supporters in Indonesia, appeared in court for his suspected
role in masterminding a suicide bomb attack that killed eight people in
Jakarta in 2016 and was claimed by IS. / AFP PHOTO / BAY ISMOYO]

Police escort Indonesian radical cleric Aman Abdurrahman (C) into a
courtroom in Jakarta on February 15, 2018 over his alleged role in a 2016
suicide bombing. Photo: AFP/Bay Ismoyo

Legal experts note that the death sentence is only a prosecution
recommendation, but it carries a message that hate speech and those that
provide the ideological justification for bloody terrorist acts are not
immune from capital punishment.

The 46-year-old cleric is the founder and spiritual leader of Jamaah
Ansharut Daulah (JAD), or Partisans of the State Group, an ISIS affiliate
formed in March 2015 from among seven main jihadi factions, including Abu
Bakar Ba’asyir’s Jamaah Anshorut Tahid (JAT), which fragmented in 2014 over
his declared support for ISIS.

The only time Indonesia has executed convicted terrorists was in 2008 when
Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) militants Imam Samudra, Ali Gufron and Amrozi
Nurhasyim died before a firing squad for their roles in the 2002 Bali
nightclub bombings that killed 202 people, including 149 tourists from 22
countries.

Although Ba’asyir, 79, was accused of being the spiritual force behind the
now-defunct JI, he avoided charges that linked him directly to that and
other bombings in the 2000s and is currently serving 15 years for
organizing a terrorist training camp in Aceh in 2010.

In recent years ill health and advanced age has seen Ba’asyir’s influence
wane, with Abdurrahman taking over as the leading purveyor of ISIS
propaganda, smuggling translations and commentaries out of prison and even
publishing several books from behind bars.

[image: Muslim militant cleric Abu Bakar Bashir (C-in white) is guarded by
Indonesian elite commandos as he leaves the police headquarters to undergo
cataract surgery in Jakarta on February 29, 2012. Indonesia's top court on
February 27 upheld a 15-year jail term against Islamist militant Abu Bakar
Bashir for terrorist acts, reversing an earlier decision to slash the
sentence to nine years. AFP PHOTO / ADEK BERRY / AFP PHOTO / ADEK BERRY]

Muslim militant cleric Abu Bakar Bashir (C) leaves police headquarters,
Jakarta, February 29, 2012. Photo: AFP/Adek Berry

A May 9-10 prison uprising at Jakarta’s Police Mobile Brigade (Brimob)
headquarters and subsequent suicide bombings in Surabaya involving three
families has triggered a nationwide manhunt for followers of JAD.

The terror organization has no known formal structure, but is thought by
police to have a sleeper cell presence in 18 of the country’s 34 provinces.

President Joko Widodo and ordinary Indonesians were shocked that
radicalized mothers would use their children to detonate pipe-bombs at
three Surabaya churches, the provincial police headquarters and a suburban
apartment block, killing 12 civilians and the 13 bombers.

But apparently not Abdurrahman, who was in an isolation block at the mobile
brigade compound when 155 prisoners staged the prison riot, murdering five
counterterrorism officers and seizing a massive weapons cache in a 36-hour
stand-off.

Although he denies urging his followers to conduct jihad, Abdurrahman
promotes the ISIS concept of *takfiri*, under which Muslims who do not
share extremist views are the same as any other non-believers and therefore
deserve to be killed.

[image: A mobile brigade policeman stands in front of the Mobile Police
Brigade (Brimob) headquarters in Depok, south of Jakarta, Indonesia, May 9,
2018. REUTERS/Beawiharta]

A policeman stands in front of the Mobile Police Brigade (Brimob)
headquarters in Depok, south of Jakarta, May 9, 2018. Photo:
Reuters/Beawiharta

For Abdurrahman, Ba’asyir and like-minded ideologues, secularism,
liberalism and pluralism are devious strategies the West has deliberately
sought to impose on Muslims as part of a new crusade to weaken and defeat
Islam across the globe.

He sees democracy as an insult to god and rejects Pancasila, the state
ideology, for promoting freedom of religion; after joining the Sharia-based
Justice and Prosperity Party (PKS) in 1998, he soon left in disgust,
accusing its members of being infidels.

A father of four, the West Java-born cleric was educated at Jakarta’s
Saudi-funded Islamic and Arabic College of Indonesia (LIPIA), long
considered a fount of puritanical Salafist teachings, but reportedly turned
down an offer to further his studies in Saudi Arabia.

His radical sermons, knowledge of Islam and fluency in Arabic soon won him
an extremist following, although in 2000 he was dismissed as a lecturer
from several Islamic institutions for his rigid views that allowed no room
for debate and saw the government as a sworn enemy.

Like Ba’asyir, he has never taken part in a terrorist operation. But in May
2004 he was arrested and sentenced to four years’ imprisonment after a bomb
accidentally went off while he was giving a sermon in a house in the south
Jakarta suburb of Depok.

[image: Indonesian anti-terror police from Detachment 88 stand guard near
explosive materials and other evidence confiscated in raids on suspected
militants during a media briefing at police headquarters in Jakarta,
Indonesia, November 30, 2016. Picture taken November 30, 2016.
REUTERS/Beawiharta - RTX2WABJ]

Indonesian anti-terror police from Detachment 88 stand guard near explosive
materials and other evidence confiscated in raids on suspected militants
Jakarta, November 30, 2016. Photo: Reuters/Beawiharta

In prison he met Ba’asyir and after their release the two clerics
collaborated in the establishment of the Aceh training camp, which helped
to unite different jihadi factions in the wake of the government’s gradual
decimation of JI.

When the camp was discovered the following year and police rounded up all
its participants, instructors and financiers, Abdurrahman received a
nine-year jail term. But prison served only as a way station.

Indeed, the emergence of ISIS in 2013 enabled his takfri doctrine to gain
wider acceptance in Indonesia’s jihadist community and led two years later
to the formation of JAD, whose thousands of followers stretch from North
Sumatra to Maluku in eastern Indonesia.

Abdurrahman was released from Nusakambangan on August 17 last year,
Indonesia’s independence day, but was immediately re-arrested for his
alleged role in orchestrating the 2016 Jakarta attack for which he may now
pay the ultimate price.

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