res :  Solusi terbaik untuk masalah ini  hanya dengan jalan pulau Jawa 
dimerdekakan dan dibebaskan dari ikatan dengan pulau-pulau di luar batas 
territorialnya. Kalau kemerdekaan ini tidak disokong dan diperjuangkan akan 
membawa bahaya lebih  besar bagi daerah-daerah-daerah lain, hal ini bisa 
diambil contoh dengan dikirim Laskar Jihad dari pulau Jawa untuk membasmi kaum 
Nasrani di Sulawesi Tengah dan Maluku. Ketika hal ini berlangsung semua 
membisu! 

Jangan dilupakan bahwa sesuai media cetak beberapa waktu silam diberitakan 
bahwa di Jawa Timur terdapat kurang lebih 10 juta orang pendukung paham 
radikal, selain itu terjadi pembakaran dan perusakan rumah-rumah ibadah kaum 
minoritas di sana sini. Di tambah lagi dengan surat tiga menteri, dan salah 
satu langkah penting telah dilapakan  oleh TNI dengan alasan membela negara 
dilatih anggota organisasi radikal yang ketuanya menyatakan: “ISIS adalah 
saudara kami”. 

Jadi jangan ngatuk  untuk tidak memerdekakan pulau Jawa yang selama ini 
dikonsentrasi segala macam pembangunan dan kemajuan di berbagai bidang, jadi 
Pulau Jawa tidak akan rugi dan menjadi terkebelakang dengan kemerdekaannya 
malah bisa cepat lebih maju dengan pesat. Kemerdekaan adalah hak semua bangsa, 
demikian dtulis pada mukadimah UUD 45.  Jadi Pulau Jawa juga punya hak untuk 
merdeka dan berdaulat penuh! Amiiiiiin!!

http://www.washingtontimes.com/news/2017/jan/22/isis-finds-easy-recruits-in-prisons-of-indonesia/

Islamic State finds easy recruits in prisons of Indonesia
Propaganda, food lure poor Muslims




Indonesia’s prisons are ripe for recruitment by the Islamic State, says a 
report by the Institute for Policy Analysis of Conflict. “Prisoners depend on 
outside donations for decent food. And the convicted terrorists have a 
well-organized support network.” (Associated Press) more >

By Rowan Scarborough - The Washington Times - Sunday, January 22, 2017 
The Islamic State is seeking a foothold in the prisons of Indonesia, a country 
with the world’s largest Muslim population and significant poverty.

Those two demographic factors can add up to a growing number of Islamic 
extremist recruits. The population of France is about 10 percent Muslim, and 
its prison system has turned into a recruiting station for the Islamic State 
and other violent groups.

The Jakarta-based Institute for Policy Analysis of Conflict is warning in a 
report that the government’s attempt to stop in-prison radicalization is 
ineffective.

One example cited in the report: Prison authorities allowed the Islamic State’s 
de facto Indonesia leader to operate a cellphone and website to disseminate 
jihadi propaganda. Those tools helped him do something else: remotely organize 
a deadly January 2016 attack in downtown Jakarta, authorities say.

With the Islamic State, also known as ISIL and ISIS, operating a base in the 
Middle East and expanding into Afghanistan, and Europe, the U.S. military would 
be hard-pressed to stamp out yet another pop-up stronghold in the multiple 
islands of Indonesia.

“The obstacles to effective prison management remain overwhelming,” said Sidney 
Jones, IPAC director and an analyst on South Asia terrorism. “Prisons are 
overcrowded and understaffed, corruption is rife and inadequate budgets make it 
easier for well-funded extremists to recruit inmates when they can offer extra 
food. No deradicalization program is going to be effective unless some of these 
issues are addressed.”

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