mBuh, nunggu saja kopasannya @mBoong yg posisinya paling pas.

--- In proletar@yahoogroups.com, "rezameutia" <rezameutia@...> wrote:
>
> berikut ini adalah profil 3 orang sasaran target bom buku baru-baru
ini di jakarta.
>
> gories mere dan ulil abshar abdallah masih bisa dipahami jika mereka
jadi sasaran target karena mereka bersinggungan dengan islam garis
keras, sementara yapto dan ahmad dhani nggak pernah bersinggungan sama
sekali dengan  islam garis keras.  tapi, mereka jadi sasaran target
juga?
>
>
> =======
>
>
> Why are they targeted?
>
> The Jakarta Post,
>  Jakarta
>
>
> Comr. Gen. Gories Mere
>
> With credentials as the nation's counterterrorism czar and a Catholic
activist, Gories is an obvious target of attacks for terrorist groups.
>
> While Gories currently serves as chief of the National Narcotics
Agency (BNN), analysts agree that the position camouflages his real
work: Coordinating all of the National Police's counterterrorism
activities.
>
> Born in East Flores, East Nusa Tenggara, on Nov. 17, 1954, Gories
established a new breed of police counterterrorism experts under the
aegis of the prestigious, off-the-radar "Satgas Antiterror", or
Antiterrorism Working Group.
>
> Gories' prodigies also hold most of the key posts at the newly
established National Counterterrorism Agency (BNPT).
>
> On the front lines of the nation's terrorist fight since 1999, Gories,
who has a reputation as a low-key leader, has become more prominent
since former National Police chief Gen. Sutanto took office in 2005.
>
> While Gories' official position in the National Police hierarchy has
no direct connection to counterterrorism, he has played a crucial role
behind the apprehension and the killing of several terrorist leaders.
>
> Gories was thought to have played a behind-the-scenes role in the
shooting of Indonesia's most wanted terrorists, Malaysians Azahari Husin
and Noordin M. Top.
>
> Azahari was shot and killed in Malang, East Java, in 2005 while
Noordin was killed in Surakarta, Central Java, in 2009.
>
> Another terrorist mastermind, Dulmatin, was shot dead in a raid in
South Tangerang in 2010.
>
> Due to Gories role in leading the nation's counterterrorism efforts,
followers of Abubakar Ba'asyir — currently on trial for allegedly
masterminding a terrorist training camp in Aceh — have repeatedly
called for Gories' assassination.
>
> In a recent trial session attended by dozens of the notorious
firebrand cleric's followers, posters condemning Gories and his officers
were brought into the South Jakarta District Court.
>
> However, Gories opponents may not be limited to terrorist groups.
>
> Several TNI generals were said to have tenuous relationships with
Gories for several reasons.
>
> A serving three-star Indonesian Army general was said to have been
annoyed by Gories after the police accused the general of harboring
terrorists several years ago.
>
> The latest incident involved a unit of counterterrorism operatives
that entered an Indonesian Air Force base in Medan, North Sumatra,
without authorization during an operation in 2010.
>
> While the incident did not ignite a shoot-out, several top Air Force
commanders logged complaints with the National Police.
>
>
> ===
>
> Ulil Abshar Abdalla
>
> Ulil's outspoken advocacy of moderate Islam has drawn criticism from
not only mainstream Muslims but also from radical groups that accused
him of twisting the Koran for his own benefit.
>
> He has been on a radical group's death list since 2001 after Kompas
newspaper published articles where he questioned the role of the Prophet
Muhammad as God's messenger.
>
> The Islamic Ulema Forum (FUUI), a hard-line group, repeated calls to
assassinate Ulil in 2005, saying it would be halal to kill him for
writing articles that lambasted those who wanted to form an Islamic
state.
>
> Born in Pati, Central Java , on
> Jan. 11, 1967, to a family of conservative Nahdlatul Ulama (NU)
Muslims, Ulil became a national icon for moderation for his work with
the Islamic Liberal Network (JIL).
>
> Ulil helped found the network in 2001 as a loose alliance of
intellectual Muslims who wanted to stimulate debate on Islamic topics.
>
> JIL made its debut on the Internet as a mailing list whose first topic
discussed whether a secular state was acceptable under Islam.
>
> The network launched a radio talk show in cooperation with radio
station 68H in Utan Kayu, East Jakarta, which currently airs on dozens
of stations throughout Indonesia.
>
> Ulil whose Twitter account, @Ulil, boasts more than 50,000 followers,
was educated until the age of 19 at an Islamic boarding school run by
his father and grandfather.
>
> He received a bachelor's degree in sharia law from the Institute of
Arabic and Islamic Studies in Jakarta before completing a graduate
degree in religious studies at Boston University.
>
> In between his time in academia, Ulil served as a director of the
Freedom Institute, primarily funded by the influential Bakrie family.
>
> Ulil is also an executive director for the Institute for the Study of
Free Flow of Information (ISAI), an NGO advocating freedom of expression
and free press in Indonesia .
>
> Despite his critical thinking, Ulil remains a member of NU and was
previously nominated to serve as one of its chairmen.
>
> He was also involved in establishing the Indonesian Conference on
Religion and Peace (ICRP), a national chapter of the World Conference on
Religion and Peace (WCRP) based in New York, and eventually became
ICRP's executive director.
>
> Last year, Ulil joined President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono's Democratic
Party, serving as the party's chairman for the center of strategic
policy and development.
>
> Ulil is currently a doctoral student at Harvard University's Islamic
studies program. JIL co-founder Luthfi Assyaukanie called the letter
bomb sent to Ulil a threat to the country's pluralism. "It's not solely
a threat to JIL... it is indeed a threat to our pluralistic society," he
said.
>
>
> Yapto Soelistyo Soerjosomarno
>
> An Indonesian man of Jewish descent called "Si Bule" (the blonde) who
is also a fervent opponent of any form of religious radicalism presents
another attractive target for hard-line extremists.
>
> Yapto, the son of an Army general and Dutch Jewish woman, is the chief
patron of the Pancasila Youth organization, whose members have allegedly
been involved in underground protection rackets for three decades.
>
> Born on Dec. 16, 1949 in Surakarta, Central Java, Yapto made a name
for himself in the mid-1960s as the leader of the "Anak Siliwangi 234"
group, whose members were mostly children of mid- and high-ranking
officers living in an Indonesian Army housing complex on Jl. Siliwangi
in Central Jakarta.
>
> Yapto, a natural leader and a scrappy fighter became one of the city's
most prominent gang leaders in the 1970s before he was elected to run
the Pancasila Youth in 1981.
>
> The father of three was set to lead the organization until 2014 after
he was re-elected in 2009.
>
> However, he said he plans to quit in 2011.
>
> The Pancasila Youth, established in October 1959 by legendary military
hero Gen. Abdul Haris Nasution, was initially formed to confront the
rise of the Indonesian Communist party.
>
> However, since 1978 the organization devolved into muscle for the
Soeharto regime and eventually into organizers for the Golkar Party,
which used its members to mobilize youth during elections.
>
> After the end of Soeharto's rule in 1998, Pancasila Youth lost its
political and security clout.
>
> Yorrys Raweyai, one of the group's most influential figures and
financiers, fell out with Yapto over a decision to set up a political
wing for the Pancasila Youth, the Patriot Party.
>
> Yorrys went to Golkar and eventually became a legislator for the
party.
>
> The Patriot Party failed meet the threshold for parliamentary
representation in both the 2004 and 2009 general elections.
>
> With funding, most notably from Yorrys, drying up, most of the group's
members now moonlight for other mass organizations, including the Betawi
Brotherhood Forum (FPR), the Islam Defenders' Front (FPI) and Laskar
Jayakarta.
>
> Sources said Yapto was currently preparing his youngest son, Jedidiah
Shenazar, to succeed him at the Pancasila Youth, which currently has
around 100,000 members in Greater Jakarta alone.
>
> Yapto was recently hired by Soeharto's eldest daughter, Siti Hadijanti
"Tutut" Rukmana, to help her out in a rift with media tycoon Harry
Tanoesidbyo over ownership of a TPI television station.
>
>
>
> ========
>




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