http://news.scotsman.com/index.cfm?id=1703452005


Sat 30 Jul 2005

Extremists rip off tsunami charity cash

IAN JOHNSTON

CHARITABLE donations to help people affected by the Asian tsunami 
disaster are falling into the hands of radical Islamic groups linked 
to terrorists in Indonesia, a leading expert on the global al-Qaeda 
network warned yesterday.

Relief money had become the "primary source" of income for two 
militant groups, including one founded by a Muslim cleric serving a 
prison sentence in connection with the Bali bombing in 2002 in which 
more than 200 people were killed.

Dr Rohan Gunaratna, head of the international centre for political 
violence and terrorism research at Singapore's Institute of Defence 
and Strategic Studies, told the Asia-Pacific Financial Crime 
Conference that the Boxing Day disaster had given "unprecedented 
opportunities for these groups to expand their areas of influence".

The UK Department For International Development (Dfid) said it 
was "concerned" about his comments and urged him to provide more 
information so it could take action if necessary. However, the Red 
Cross, Oxfam and Cafod aid agencies insisted that strict accounting 
procedures saw to it that no money given to them had fallen into the 
wrong hands.

Dr Gunaratna, author of the book Inside al Qaeda: Global Network of 
Terror, said the radical Islamic groups Mujahideen Kompak and 
Majelis Mujahideen Indonesia, or MMI, were moving into the Aceh 
region, where 130,000 people were killed and entire villages 
demolished by the devastating tsunami.

He told the conference, organised by banks in Singapore, that steps 
had to be taken to ensure that charitable donations did not go 
astray.

"Charities are a primary source of income for these groups," he 
said. "That's why there has to be more accountability in where 
donations go."

MMI, which has been called the Indonesian equivalent of Sinn Fein, 
was founded by militant cleric Abu Bakar Bashir, who is serving a 30-
month jail sentence for conspiracy in the Bali bombings. Its name 
means the Council of Mujahideen For Islamic Law Enforcement.

The Brussels-based International Crisis Group has said Mujahideen 
Kompak plans to wage holy war in Indonesia.

And, according to the US-based analysts Global Security, Mujahideen 
Kompak has been responsible for attacks on Christians, including the 
nail-bombing of a church in North Jakarta during evening prayers in 
November 2001. Its leaders are also sometimes drawn from the 
infamous Indonesian terrorist group Jemaah Islamiyah.

Indonesian authorities have arrested scores of al-Qaeda-linked 
militants suspected of being involved in the Bali bombings, last 
year's attack on the Australian Embassy in Jakarta, or in the 2003 
attack on the city's Marriott Hotel. But some critics still accuse 
the government of being soft on terrorists for fear of escalating 
conflicts in a land which is home to more Muslims than any other.

Dr Gunaratna said: "Indonesia must suffer more from terrorism for 
the people and their leaders to realise that terror is serious 
business and you can't flirt with terrorists."

Terrorism expert Professor David Capitanchik, formerly of Robert 
Gordon University, told The Scotsman that terrorist groups were 
known to have set up charities to act as money-laundering operations.

"Around mosques, there are lots of people standing outside with 
boxes asking people to give to charity," he said. "It is rare that 
people who donate money know exactly where it is going. 
Organisations banned in this country - like Hamas - raise funds like 
that here."

Patrick Nicholson, of Catholic aid agency Cafod, who was in Aceh in 
early this year and again in June, said that while radical Islamic 
groups had first tried to exploit the situation to whip up anti-
Western feeling, they appeared to have given up.

"I would challenge him [Dr Gunaratna]. There aren't the same sort of 
groups [in Aceh] as you see in other parts of Indonesia," he 
said. "They [Islamic extremists] turned up after the tsunami and 
tried to get Western aid agencies kicked out. 

"But they got no support from local people, and they all left."

When he returned in June, there was no sign of Islamic radicals. He 
added that Cafod's accounting allowed a £10 donation in Britain to 
be traced to the building of a house or buying of a boat.

A spokesman for the International Committee for the Red Cross said 
simply: "If the question is, 'Is Red Cross funding falling into the 
hands of terrorists?', in our view, it isn't."

However, the UK government appeared to be taking the claim 
seriously. A Dfid spokesman said: "We are concerned to hear these 
allegations. We encourage Dr Gunaratna to approach Dfid with more 
information."
        








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