https://www.asiatimes.com/2020/02/article/indonesia-leaves-ex-isis-members-to-rot-in-syria/



ISIS-affiliated groups are persistent threats to Indonesia's national
security. Image: Facebook
*Indonesia leaves ex-ISIS members to rot in Syria*

Indonesian officials opt against repatriation of former ISIS fighters and
supporters they see as a terror-promoting “virus”


The Indonesian government has finally taken the decision not to repatriate
hundreds of Indonesian Islamic State (ISIS) fighters and supporters
stranded in Kurdish-controlled prisons and detention camps close to the
Syria-Iraq border, calling them a “virus” that could infect the rest of the
population.

Indonesia is normally protective of its people abroad but the February 11
announcement came as no surprise after President Joko Widodo, Political
Coordinating Minister Mahfud MD, security chiefs and religious leaders all
gave repatriation plans the thumbs down.

The decision applies to not only the estimated 200 detainees in northern
Syria, but to as many as 500 other militants and sympathizers the US
Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) has identified in Turkey and elsewhere in
the Middle East and South Asia.




For Widodo, it is another problem he can do without as he focuses his
attention on reviving the country’s moribund economy. “It is still under
discussion, plus and minus,” he said earlier this month. “But if you ask
me, I will say ‘no.’”

“That’s always been the case,” says one terrorism expert who is tracking
the situation. “The Indonesians all had their passports taken away by ISIS
and authorities say because they don’t have travel documents, they can’t
prove their nationality. The police don’t want them back and neither does
the army.”

What makes the issue sensitive is that at least 80% of the detainees, in
Syria at least, are women and children whose husbands and partners, like
other foreign fighters, were cynically used as cannon fodder by the ISIS
leadership as the caliphate crumbled.

Indonesians arrive at the Ain Issa camp, 50 kilometers north of Raqqa after
fleeing the ISIS group’s Syrian bastion, June 13, 2017. – Photo by Ayham
al-Mohammad / AFP

Most are living in squalid conditions in al-Hol, a sprawling camp of 74,000
about 200 kilometers east of the former ISIS stronghold of Raqqa in Syria.
Food, water and health care are in short supply and hard-core women in the
camp are still trying to enforce ISIS rules, according to numerous reports.

Some of the Indonesians are the widows of non-Indonesian foreigners whom
they married in Syria, often after their first Indonesian husband was
killed. Others are married to Indonesian militants who are detained
separately in Syrian Defense Force (SDF) prisons.

If the families were not radicalized before leaving for the Middle East,
they almost certainly are now. And that makes them a significant threat if
they are released back into Indonesia’s population. If social media
sentiment is any guide, many Indonesians don’t want them back either.



Even the influential mass Muslim organization Nahdlatul Ulama, which has a
membership of more than 40 million, is opposed to their repatriation. But
Widodo’s government has made no effort to follow the lead of some European
nations by illegally trying to strip detainees of their citizenship.

“If these foreign terrorist fighters come back they could become a new
terrorist virus that threatens our 267 million people,” Mahfud told
reporters on February 11 after meeting with the president at his Bogor
palace. “There are no plans to bring them home.”

He did say, however, that the government would spend more time collecting
its own data and would consider repatriating children under 10 years of age
on a case by case basis, whether their parents are in detention or not.

Security sources say they believe about 60 Indonesian fighters have slipped
back into Indonesia apparently undetected since the fall of the ISIS
caliphate early last year, but little is known about their whereabouts or
whether they have joined active terror groups like Jamaah Anshurat Daulah
(JAD).

[image: A government worker removes ISIS (Islamic State of Iraq and Syria)
flags painted on to walls near Veteran Street in Surakarta City, Indonesia,
in an attempt to discourage the promotion of the jihadist group in the
region. Photo: AFP Forum/Agoes Rudianto]A government worker removes ISIS
flags painted on walls near Veteran Street in Surakarta City, Indonesia.
Photo: AFP Forum/Agoes Rudianto

There is confusion over the official number of ISIS sympathizers. The CIA’s
list of 689, whose existence has only just become known, is believed to
include many duplicates; because Arab and English speakers wrote their
names down phonetically when they were detained, they bear no relation to
their Indonesian spellings.

Government sources told Asia Times the CIA accounting does include
photographs and fingerprints, but the National Counter-Terrorism Agency
(BNPT), which has a slightly lower figure, still has to compare it with
their own database and other government records.

Most of the ISIS faithful went to the Middle East with their eyes wide
open, seduced by the romantic notion of living in a caliphate. Some
families sold off everything they owned to make the journey, convinced they
would never return to their Indonesian homeland.

Reintegrating them back into society would be a complex and long-term
process which authorities are ill-equipped to deal with and without any
real guarantee of success. It is safer, they say, to leave them where they
are – at least for now.

De-radicalization programs have worryingly foundered on a shortage of
funding, the lack of a proper prison classification system and a failure to
understand that the process will take years and must offer the promise of
employment and a better future.

Widodo began his second term with a renewed drive to crack down on growing
Islamic radicalism, appointing retired army general Fachrul Razi as
religious affairs minister and former police chief Tito Karnavian as home
affairs minister.

They and other members of the new Cabinet have started to implement
policies aimed at curbing radicalism within the bureaucracy and revising
the curriculums of Islamic and state schools which teach children to be
intolerant of other religions.

[image: Indonesian President Joko Widodo (2nd R), accompanied by top
General Moeldoko (L) and General Gatot Nurmantyo during the inauguration of
an Indonesian army military exercise in Baturaja, southern Sumatra island
in 2016. Photo: AFP/Presidential Palace/Rusman]Indonesian President Joko
Widodo (C) accompanied by top security officials in 2016. Photo:
AFP/Presidential Palace/Rusman

The Religious Affairs Ministry is also working on an overhaul of a joint
2006 ministerial regulation laying down stringent requirements for the
building of new places of worship, which has become a bone of contention
among diverse communities.

“We must stop intolerance, stop xenophobia, stop radicalism and stop
terrorism,” Widodo told a joint session of the Australian Parliament during
his first official visit to Canberra this week.

Against this background, the surviving Indonesian militants and their
dependents who flocked to join ISIS when it declared its short-lived
caliphate in 2014 can expect to remain cut off from their homeland for a
long while.

Minister Razi, a former deputy military commander, was forced to retract a
February 1 statement that the BNPT would repatriate the stranded ISIS
supporters, some of whom once made a show of burning their Indonesian
passports.

Last August, the Jakarta-based Institute for the Policy Analysis of
Conflict (IPAC), an independent research outfit, urged the government to
move forward on a policy for bringing back its more vulnerable citizens,
especially children made orphans by three years of bitter Middle Eastern
warfare.

“There’s no need to wait for an all-encompassing policy to bring back those
most at risk,” said IPAC director Sidney Jones, a leading terrorism expert.
“The government doesn’t have to decide what to do about 200 people, it can
start with five or ten.”

Indonesian children rest following their arrival at the Ain Issa camp, 50
kilometres north of Raqa, after fleeing the Islamic State (IS) group’s
Syrian bastion on June 13, 2017. – Photo: AFP/Ayham al-Mohammad

The IPAC briefing quotes a Kurdish journalist who reported that among those
who fled from the last pocket of ISIS-held territory at Baghouz in March
2019 were eight Indonesian children, whose mother had died and whose father
was still fighting. The oldest was then 15.

Jones says the dilemma facing Indonesian authorities is exemplified by the
case of Utsman Mustofa Mahdamy, a Solo-born combat radio operator who
surrendered to Kurdish-led forces after the fall of the ISIS stronghold of
Raqqa in October 2017.

In February last year, Mahdamy wrote to his relatives in Indonesia, saying
his decision to join ISIS was the biggest mistake of his life and that he
was willing to work with the Indonesian government if he and his family
were allowed to return home. Underlining the difficulties faced by
Indonesian authorities, Jones asked how they whether he is telling the
truth and how they can make a proper assessment of his sincerity without
gaining access to the six main SDF prisons now holding an estimated 10,000
ISIS detainees.

As of mid-2019, Mahdamy was among five Indonesians imprisoned, along with
what are considered to be the most dangerous 400 ISIS fighters, in a
converted warehouse near the town of Al-Malkiyah in northern Syria.

In the meantime, his wife remains in al-Roj, one of a cluster of smaller
camps close to the Iraq border where she and her children are open to harsh
treatment from more diehard detainees who are well aware of her husband’s
“defection.

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