http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=4700&Itemid=202


      Indonesia's Jihadis Rebuilding, Report Says        
      Written by Our Correspondent  
      Tuesday, 17 July 2012  

             
            Bashir: The devil's disciple? 
      International Crisis Group says terrorists are looking for revenge for 
2010 Aceh raid

      Despite having been nearly wiped out by intense police pressure, 
Indonesia’s violent extremists are finding ways to regroup, using old networks 
to build new alliances, according to a new report by the International Crisis 
Group.

      The jihadists were smashed in the wake of bombings in Bali in 2002 which 
killed 2002 people in the Kuta tourism district and injured 240 in what was 
called the deadliest act of terrorism in Indonesia’s history. Three of the 
bombers were executed and a fourth killed in a gunfight with police.

      While the police have been relatively effective against the violent 
Islamists, however, they have been almost criminally negligent in protecting 
minority members of the society against threats from mainstream Muslim groups. 
The tendency of the National Police is to look the other way in cases where 
mobs beset the Ahmadiyah sect, as happened when a Muslim mob descended on sect 
members in Bogor on July 15, beating them for being in company with western 
journalists. The police then forced the Ahmadiyah members to apologize for the 
incident and said no one would be arrested because there were no suspects.

      In what seems a particularly toothless statement, the report recommends 
suggests that the government “must…design and implement a policy of zero 
tolerance toward any religiously-inspired violence, including maximum sentences 
for vandalism, assault and threats of violence, with clear instructions to all 
government employees, including police, to shun interaction with groups or 
members of groups that have a known history of such activity.”

      As to the violent extremists, however, the National Police’s Densus 88 
unit has an impressive record of killing or capturing militants, most recently 
in March when they killed five suspected terrorists after keeping them under 
surveillance for a month. In 2009, Densus 88 rolled up a long string of 
terrorists in shootouts in Central Java, killing, among others, Noordin Mohamad 
Top, perhaps Southeast Asia’s top jihadi terrorist, among others. In the 
shootout that netted Noordin, three other suspects were killed as well, and a 
woman in the house was wounded. In early August 2009, police also killed two 
other suspected militants and found 500 kilograms of explosives in a raid on a 
house in the Bekasi area near Jakarta. 

      However, according to the report, the militants are finding ways to 
regroup on the run, in prison and throughout Internet forums, using social 
media to remain in communication. The ease with which wanted men can move 
around, communicate with friends in prison, share information and skills, 
disseminate ideology, purchase arms, conduct training and recruit new followers 
shows how much basic preventive work still needs to be done, the report notes. 

      “In many cases, the same individuals keep reappearing, using old networks 
to build new alliances,” the report says.” The fact that they have been 
singularly inept in their operations in recent years does not mean that the 
danger of attacks is over. There are signs that at least some are learning 
lessons from past failures and becoming more sophisticated in recruitment and 
fundraising.”

      The police severely crippled militant operations in early 2010 when they 
raided a training camp in Aceh on the northern end of Sumatra, capturing or 
killing many senior leaders and discovering information that led to the arrest, 
trial and imprisonment of 200 individuals.

      “Instead of cowing the jihadis into submission, however, police 
operations inspired a new wave of activity motivated by the desire for revenge, 
with new partnerships and training centers established and new plans set in 
motion,” the ISG said. Underground activity directly or indirectly assisted by 
radical imams has cropped up in Medan, North Sumatra; Poso, Central Sulawesi; 
Solo, Central Java; Bima, West Nusa Tenggara; and parts of East Kalimantan. 

      Almost a dozen plots since the 2010 raid have been connected directly or 
indirectly to the fugitives from Aceh. 

      Many of the jihadi groups operating today have links to Jamaah Anshorut 
Tauhid (JAT), a group set up by the radical cleric Abu Bakar Bashir in 2008 
that has replaced Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) as the country’s largest and most 
active jihadi organization. Bashir has repeatedly been jailed for fomenting 
terrorism only to be freed by the courts. He was most recently convicted in 
June 2011 and sentenced to 15 years in prison. After a Jakarta High Court 
reduced the sentence, the Supreme court reinstated it. 

      Jemaat Islamiyah, which was held responsible for the 2002 Bali attack, 
continues to exert an influence through its schools, despite disapproval on the 
part of other militant groups supposedly because of its abandonment of jihad. 

      Several smaller groups have emerged as well, often composed of 
inexperienced young amateurs who lack the skills, discipline and strategic 
vision of the so-called Afghan generation, the jihadis who trained on the 
Afghanistan-Pakistan border between 1985 and 1994 and produced the Bali 
bombers, the report notes. 

      The militants have learned from the Aceh experience, in which a web of 
jihadi organizations were training together. Today they are more aware of how 
their ranks have been infiltrated by Indonesian police intelligence, concluding 
they must be more careful about vetting members and protecting their 
communications, lessons the previous generation learned in Afghanistan and 
Pakistan. Most of that generation have been wiped out or neutralized.

      “There has been less introspection within the government about why 
recruitment continues to take place or why there are so many more terrorist 
plots – even if most have been poorly conceived,” the report notes, pointing 
out that the police have become skilled at identifying and arresting those 
responsible for violent crimes and interdicting plots, but there are virtually 
no effective programs are in place to address the environment in which jihadi 
ideology continues to flourish.

      The report suggests that the Indonesian government adopt 20 
recommendations designed to thwart further terrorism. They include designing a 
study to determine what networks the extremists use to evade police when they 
believe they are under surveillance, perhaps by further interrogation of the 
200 militants they arrested at the Aceh camp.

      Other recommendations include designing programs to reduce the influence 
of radical clerics such as Abu Bakar Bashir, strengthening the analytical 
capabilities of the National Anti-Terrorism Agency, developing better 
information-sharing coordination between law enforcement groups and speed up 
efforts to identify and monitor high-risk detainees, both while in detention as 
well as after their release. 

      The government must also close loopholes in airport security that allow 
passengers to present false identification without fear of detection and to 
make more systematic use of the expertise of young Indonesian scholars when 
developing policy on countering extremism. 
     


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