http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/common/story_page/0,5744,12434094%5E287
37,00.html

 

Jailed, not silenced
Sian Powell
March 04, 2005

THE militants roared, hundreds of police officers tensed, and the Islamic
preacher Abu Bakar Bashir stopped swivelling in his chair. The central
character in a drama that reached a climax yesterday, Bashir remained
stony-faced as judges convicted him of conspiracy in connection with the
Bali bombings.

With a cast of Western ambassadors, presidents and government ministers, a
rabble of lawyers, Bashir's story has become a tale of extremist religion
vsecularism and the mutual distrust between many Muslims and the West.
Played out against a backdrop of increasing tensions in Palestine,
Afghanistan and Iraq, the trial of the extremist cleric has been beamed into
living-rooms across Asia and splashed across newspapers around the world. 

More than two years of diplomatic brinkmanship, media frenzy and hate-filled
hearings has now reached some kind of ending; not with a dramatically
crafted bang, but with an anti-climactic misfire. The extremist preacher was
sentenced to two years and six months in prison; just enough to infuriate
both the squads of his screaming supporters, who want him set free, and
those in the international world, who want him locked up forever. The
preacher has already been in prison for 10 months, leaving 20 months left to
serve. It's likely, too, he will appeal the sentence, and analysts believe
he will soon stroll away from prison. 

Long accused of founding and leading the terrorist network Jemaah Islamiah,
the seemingly mild-mannered cleric has been tried twice in Jakarta courts,
both times facing severe penalties: the first time a potential life
sentence, the second, a possible death sentence. Both times he slipped free
of heavy penalties. 

The first time around, the 66-year-old preacher was sentenced to a paltry
four years in prison for treason and minor immigration and document
falsification crimes, which was then twice reduced on appeal. Now, despite
the efforts of Indonesian police and prosecutors, it looks as though he will
again beat the rap, with the panel of five judges from the South Jakarta
court acquitting him of seven charges and convicting him on one. 

Born in Jombang, in Java, Bashir was sent to the Gontor Islamic boarding
school and then made his way to the preaching faculty of Al-Irsyad
University in Solo. He failed to graduate but he became a leader of the
radical Islamic Youth Movement and honed his fiery rhetoric and
fundamentalist passions. Legend has it he also joined the rebel Darul Islam
movement, known for its battles with the secular establishment in the 1950s.


By 1972, with a fellow believer in strict Islamic sharia law, he set up the
notorious Al-Mukmin pesantren, or Islamic boarding school, in Ngruki, Solo.
The Ngruki school, as it became known, is the alma mater of a terror roll of
JI militants, including the chief Bali bomber, Mukhlas. 

A few years later, in 1978, the preacher was arrested and jailed for
subversion, for circulating fiery tracts urging Muslims to resist secular
authority and fight the enemies of Islam. Eventually tried in 1982, he was
sentenced to a nine-year prison term, later reduced to four. Within a few
years of his release he fled to Malaysia, where he remained in exile until
after the despot Suharto was ousted. So Bashir is accustomed to prison and
to enduring the suspense of court proceedings. This time around, the
prosecution finally dropped a charge of inciting terrorism, which carries
the death penalty, and only demanded an eight-year prison sentence. Their
demands were based on the fairly feeble contention that Bashir should have
prevented his followers from committing terrorist acts. 

Although many have no doubt Bashir founded JI, the question of whether he
has been involved more recently is cloudier. Witnesses testified in this
trial that he had visited JI's Hudaibiyah training camp in the Philippines
in 2000 and witnessed a passing-out ceremony. A senior JI operative, Nasir
Abbas, now a police informer, told the court Bashir inspected four lines of
graduates at the event. Abbas and another operative, Mustofa, flanked the
cleric and the trio was followed by two guards, Abbas explained. "And then
we had a demonstration of fighting and bombs." The judges said yesterday
that Bashir was indeed the emir, or leader of JI, and had visited the
training camp in the Philippines. 

Yet despite proving Bashir had a connection to JI, the prosecution failed to
produce any witnesses to directly link the preacher with the Bali bombings,
the blast at Jakarta's Marriott hotel in 2003 or other terrorist acts. No
witness would admit to any direct knowledge Bashir was JI's leader. The
defence counsel pointed out that at the time of the Marriott attack, Bashir
had been imprisoned for nine months. Yet the judges determined Bashir had
permitted the Bali bombings to go ahead, even though the crucial witnesses,
Bali bombers Amrozi and Mubarok, had not testified. The judges made the
finding from the prosecution's indictment, based on police interviews. 

Indonesian prosecutors have done their best to keep Bashir behind bars. Yet
without an Internal Security Act such as Malaysia's or Singapore's, it is
necessary to find him guilty of something. Unlike the men the US has
incarcerated in Guantanamo Bay, extremists in Indonesia can't be kept locked
up indefinitely without trial. 

Bashir has always denied knowing anything about JI and denied any connection
with terrorist acts. He has repeatedly asserted that his imprisonment is the
result of Western interference in Indonesia's judicial process. 

The International Crisis Group's Southeast Asian director, Sidney Jones, an
acknowledged terrorism expert who has written a number of seminal papers on
JI, says it's clear Bashir was connected to JI, but it's not clear how
involved he was in operational matters. JI is not a proscribed organisation
in Indonesia: it's no crime to simply be associated or a member. 

Nevertheless, various Western eminences believe in Bashir's guilt and want
him to stay in prison. Australia's Foreign Minister Alexander Downer called
him a "loathsome creature". Last year, the then US secretary of homeland
security Tom Ridge said Bashir had an "intense and deep involvement ... in
both the execution and planning of terrorist activities". According to the
testimony of a one-time State Department translator, Fred Burks, the US
tried to persuade the Indonesian president at the time, Megawati
Sukarnoputri, to hand Bashir over for transportation to an undisclosed
location. She refused, the translator said, because she believed Bashir was
too well-known in Indonesia, unlike Omar al-Faruq, the Kuwaiti Indonesia
gave to the US. 

According to one of Bashir's chief lawyers, Wiranan Adnan, the verdict today
hinged on whether the judges had succumbed to Western pressures. The
prosecution failed to provide any proof to back the charges, he says, and
failed to provide damaging witness testimony. 

Calm and seemingly benign, Bashir has been a moderating influence on his
hordes of hysterical supporters who have packed the makeshift court in the
auditorium of Jakarta's Agriculture Department. "Allahu Akbar" or "God is
great" they shout at any opportunity, along with catcalls at the judges and
prosecutors - they once told the chief prosecutor they hoped he would have a
stroke. Bashir can flap a hand to quieten the young men, clad in
Palestinian-style kaffiyehs, and jackets emblazoned with Mujahidin or holy
warrior. Many are from his Indonesian Mujahidin Council (MMI), others are
connected to his notorious Ngruki Islamic boarding school. On occasion,
hundreds have packed the auditorium, watched by nearly as many uniformed and
plain-clothes police. 

Dressed in immaculately laundered shirts and sarongs, and industriously
taking notes, Bashir seems an unlikely leader of this hysterical rabble.
Hasyim, an MMI member, spends every day with Bashir in his cell in Cipinang
prison, organising his leader's schedule, ensuring food is brought in from
outside or cooked inside the prison, ensuring prisoners are on hand to do
the laundry. Bashir has been visited every day, sometimes by his wife and
children, sometimes by MMI leaders, occasionally by politicians from
mainstream parties and occasionally by high-profile Islamic scholars and
leaders. 

It seems the preacher inspires a certain level of devotion that straddles
the divides of wealth and prestige. "I have been with Abu Bakar Bashir since
he was evacuated from Solo in October 2002," Hasyim says. "I was with him
when he got to Jakarta and I have been with him ever since." 

Sian Powell is The Australian's Jakarta correspondent. Additional reporting
by Olivia Rondonuwu. 



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