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Southeast Asia
Mahathir rejoins UMNO
2009-04-05
[Straits Times] FORMER Malaysian prime minister Mahathir Mohamad rejoined Umno on Saturday, a year after quitting in a huff over the way his successor was running the government. He returned to the party a day after Datuk Seri Najib Razak took over from Tun Abdullah Badawi as the new Prime Minister.

On Saturday, Tun Mahathir handed his application form along with the requisite RM2 (80 Singapore cents) membership fee to Mr Najib, the party president. Dr Mahathir's wife, Tun Dr Siti Hasmah Mohd Ali, and their son Datuk Mokhzani followed suit.

The former premier told reporters he was happy to be back and urged those who had left along with him to return as well. 'The image of Umno has suffered somewhat in the last few years. The first thing to be done is to clean up the image of Umno,' he said. 'I am prepared to help Umno regain the people's trust.'

The first test would take place tomorrow, when he goes out to help canvass for votes for the ruling Barisan Nasional coalition in two by-elections - in Perak and Kedah - on Tuesday.

'I believe his return will be an encouragement to Umno and will help us to rebuild the party,' Mr Najib said of Dr Mahathir.

The latter resigned as prime minister in 2003 after 22 years in power, hand-picking Mr Abdullah as his successor. But within a year, he turned against Mr Abdullah after the new leader overturned many of his pet projects. 'Although I was out of Umno, my heart and soul were in Umno,' Dr Mahathir said.

He added there was no need for any formal party or government positions for him and that the criticisms he had hurled at the party were intended to strengthen it, not destroy it. Asked whether he would continue to be just as vocal during Mr Najib's administration, he said : 'I was critical whenever Umno went wrong.'
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Southeast Asia
Manila may resume talks with Muslim rebels
2009-03-05
(AKI) - The Philippines government and the Muslim separatist Moro Islamic Liberation Front are reported to be close to resuming talks, after Manila announced that it has dropped a precondition for arresting key commanders, Umbra Kato and Bravo.

Media reports cited foreign affairs undersecretary Rafael Seguis on Wednesday saying that the government peace panel is now waiting for the resumption of talks to be scheduled with the MILF by Malaysian facilitators.

The two commanders, at least formally repudiated by the MILF central command, are accused to have led a series of raids against Christian villages in the south in August last year.

The raids were sparked by the Philippines supreme court ruling that stopped the two parties from signing a memorandum which would have allowed the territory to be included in an autonomous Moro homeland, the Bangsamoro Juridical Entity. The court later ruled the agreement unconstitutional.

Seguis said on Wednesday that the peace talks can resume even if the army is still to arrest the two rogue rebels.

On the fringes of the ASEAN meeting held last week in Thailand, Malaysian prime minister Abdullah Badawi confirmed Kuala Lumpur's commitment to the talks.

The combined effect of the Supreme Court ruling and the two commanders' raids has led to worsening conflict in Mindanao.

Clashes between the army and rebel fighters have taken place almost daily and scores of people have been killed. The National Disaster Coordinating Council also said that more than half a million people were displaced at the height of the fighting in August last year.

It is estimated that some 112,000 people are still living in evacuation camps while another 200,000 are staying with friends or relatives.

The government has long stated that it will end its military operations when the MILF turns over the rogue commanders.

The MILF, however, is unwilling to hand over the commanders and wants international monitors to determine whether the men were responsible for ceasefire violations.

The Malaysian-led international team left Mindanao last November citing frustration with the slow progress of the talks.

According to the International Crisis Group think-tank, "the MILF has no interest in alienating Kato and cannot control Bravo."

In its latest report, released in February, the Brussels-based ICG also expressed scepticism regarding a solution to the conflict.

"As it stands, the two sides are too far apart, the potential spoilers too numerous, and the political will in Manila too weak to hope for a negotiated peace any time soon," the ICG said.

More than 80 percent of the five million Muslims in the Philippines live in Mindanao, where the MILF has been fighting for an independent separatist state since the 1970s.

According to the 2007 census, 81 percent of the 88.5 million Filipinos are Catholics.
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Southeast Asia
Minor partner in Malaysia's ruling coalition quits
2008-09-18
(PTI) A small party in Malaysia's ruling coalition pulled out today, compounding the problems of beleaguered premier Abdullah Badawi amid a bid by the resurgent opposition to topple his government.

The Sabah Progressive Party, having two members in Parliament, quit the 14-party Barisan Nasional coalition after weeks of dithering, citing dissatisfaction with BN leadership. Party chief Yong Teck Lee said SAPP will remain independent but will work with anyone and be in consultation with various parties including the opposition alliance. He also launched a scathing attack on the BN, saying it had "lost its moral authority to rule".

With the SAPP's withdrawal, Barisan will have a majority of 56 in Parliament. Opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim, who is planning a bid to seize power, has claimed that 31 MPs had agreed to cross over to the opposition. He, however, did not name the 'defectors'.

In March elections, the coalition won 140 seats and the opposition claimed 82.

Meanwhile, the country's Anti-Corruption Agency has opened a file to investigate claims by Barisan MPs that they are being offered money by the opposition alliance to join them. ACA director-general Ahmad Said said this was part of a proactive measure by the agency to investigate such reports of corruption. "We are currently monitoring the situation. We have several reports already of MPs who have claimed to be offered money to cross over to the Opposition," he said.
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Britain
UK: Government Minister - sidelining of Christianity is 'common sense'
2008-06-09
To be specific, "sidelining" of Christianity at the expense of Islam
It is "common sense" for Christianity to be sidelined at the expense of Islam, a Government minister claimed on Sunday.

Hazel Blears, the Communities Secretary, defended Labour’s policy on religion after a report backed by the Church of England claimed that Muslims receive a disproportionate amount of attention. She said it was right that more money and effort was spent on Islam than Christianity because of the threat from extremism and home-grown terrorism.

Ms Blears told BBC Radio 4’s Sunday programme: “That’s just common sense. If we’ve got an issue where we have to build resilience of young Muslim men and women to withstand an extremist message.”

She added: “We live in a secular democracy. That’s a precious thing. We don’t live in a theocracy, but we’ve always accepted that hundreds of thousands of people are motivated by faith. We live in a secular democracy but we want to recognise the role of faith.”
"As we try to diminish and ridicule faith, scoff at believers for their antiquated and dangerous thought crimes, atomize our society and ensure that all subjects enjoy the goodness of the state," she added.
The Church of England bishop responsible for the report, the Rt Rev Stephen Lowe, Bishop for Urban Life and Faith, said afterwards: “She said we live in a secular democracy. That comes as news to me – we have an established Church, but the Government can’t deal with Christianity.”

As The Daily Telegraph reported on Saturday, the landmark report commissioned by the Church and written by academics at the Von Hugel Institute accuses ministers of paying only “lip service” to Christianity and marginalising the Anglican and Roman Catholic churches, while focusing “intently” on Islam.

However Malaysia’s Prime Minister warned yesterday that Muslim extremism in Britain will grow unless the Government and society convert learn to understand Islam. Abdullah Badawi claimed that the legacy of Britain’s imperial past has hampered its ability to appreciate its Islamic population.
July 7 should be named "Muslim Appreciation Day".
In an interview with The Daily Telegraph, the prime minister urged Gordon Brown to allow the country’s Muslims to live under Islamic law, but also said that they must prove their worth to society.

Mr Abdullah argues that the Government must do more to ensure Muslims do not feel discriminated against if it is to tackle the rise of radicalism. “The failure to understand Muslims is driving a divide between the communities,” he said. “Gordon Brown must encourage a better understanding because Britain must appreciate its Muslims.”
What the hell business is it of Mr. Abdullah what happens in Britain?
Mr Abdullah argued that Britain needs to come to terms with being home to immigrants from countries that it used to rule over.
Malaysia - a land of tolerance, where everyone is identified by ethnicity and religion /s
“The British Empire expanded in Asia, everywhere, throughout the Muslim land, through the land of Hindus and the land of Buddhists.

“When they were ruling it was different because they wanted it to be peaceful and to keep it peaceful they had to use diplomacy.”

He said that Muslims in Britain were more likely to be radicalised because they feel ignored rather than due to religious reasons. “Is it because of poverty, social unrest, deprivation, feeling discriminated against, thinking people don’t care much because of the colour of their skin?”

Mr Abdullah, who was talking on the eve of a landmark summit of world leaders, echoed the calls of the Archbishop of Canterbury earlier this year for Muslims and dhimmis to be able to live under sharia.
Thanks, Rowan.
The Malaysian Prime Minister also acknowledged that Muslims must also play their part in proving their value as immigrants. “If they want to be respected then they must do something for the community,” he said. “They must not be a liability. They have to be an asset.”
He means that differently than you and I would at first interpret it ...
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Southeast Asia
Malaysia's Abdullah forms new cabinet after election battering
2008-03-10
Malaysia's Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi will be looking to fill three cabinet spots today after his ruling coalition took a battering at the weekend's elections. Mr Abdullah will visit the country's King today to introduce his new government.

His Barisan Nasional coalition won the national vote but saw its majority drop by 60 seats. It has also lost control of four state governments which have been picked up by one of the major parties in the new opposition alliance.

Former deputy prime minister Anwar Ibrahim did not contest the vote because he is still banned from politics, but he brought the opposition parties together against the ruling coalition which has held power for five decades. The ban against him will end next month. As yet he has not revealed his immediate plans, but he is expected to contest a by-election sometime soon.
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Syria-Lebanon-Iran
Syria-Malaysia: Governments eye ever-closer ties
2007-07-02
Damascus, 2 July (AKI) - A high-level Syrian-Malaysian committee, whose brief is to develop economic and trade cooperation between the two countries, was meeting for the first time on Monday in Kuala Lumpur. The Syrian delegation is led by the economy and trade minister Amer Lutfi. During the meeting, Damascus and Kuala Lumpur are expected to a series of accords and protocols in the areas of trade, science and technology, culture and the media.
Hmmm... what does Syria have that Malaysia wants/needs?

The Syrian government is especially interested in recent economic and political developments in Malaysia. In 2004, the King of Malaysia and the then prime minister visited Syria and last year the current premier Abdullah Badawi came to Damascus where he signed eight cooperation accords.

Malaysia is considered a model for members of the Syrian government in view of its desire to create a stock exchange, as well as a gateway through which Damascus is seeking entry for its products into the South East Asian market.

The volume of trade between the two countries is currently around 40 million euros per annum.
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Southeast Asia
Muslim rebel says Thai govt sabotaging peace bid
2007-03-15
A Muslim rebel leader accused the Thai government on Thursday of sabotaging peace moves in the restive south of the country, stoking popular anger and fuelling more violence.

Abu Najhan, a leader of the Pattani United Liberation Organisation (PULO), said Thailand had misrepresented the position of Muslim rebel groups after they had held a series of recent peace talks in neighbouring Malaysia. The peace drive, brokered by former Malaysian Prime Minister Mahathir Mohamad and backed by Thai King Bhumibol Adulyadej, called for an amnesty in exchange for ceasefire.

"All of us signed the peace proposals but the Thai authorities are telling the people that we have surrendered. This has angered southern Muslims," Najhan told Reuters in a telephone interview, speaking from a secret hideout. "The Muslims are upset with us. We have been sabotaged."

But a Thai general involved in the talks said the dialogue had been suspended after Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra was ousted in a coup last September. "The unofficial peace plan, which former Prime Minister Mahathir was kindly helping, has come to a halt after the new government preferred to work with Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi," General Vaipot Srinual told Reuters.

Until August last year, former prime minister Mahathir had been meeting Muslim leaders from the Thai south about possible conditions for striking a peace deal with Thailand. Mahathir has spoken of the potential for a form of autonomy for the south.

The groups represented in the Mahathir peace talks were all separatist guerrilla groups active in the 1970s and 1980s in the three southernmost provinces of Yala, Pattani and Narathiwat, an independent sultanate until annexed by Thailand a century ago. The groups included Bersatu, an umbrella group, PULO, the Barisan Revolusi Nasional, or National Revolutionary Front in Malay, and the Gerakan Mujahideen Islam Pattani, or Pattani Islamic Mujahideen Movement.

"There must be give and take," Mahathir's son, Mukhriz Mahathir, told Reuters on Thursday. He described the current security situation in the Thai provinces as alarming. "We were hoping the Thai government would engage the southerners to some discussions, by addressing the real concern."

PULO's Najhan denied the rebels were behind the attacks on civilians: "Our fighters would not do that, we won't attack civilians. Our real enemy is the Thai military."
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Southeast Asia
Thai Muslim youth to visit Malaysia
2007-01-25
Up to 30 young Muslims from five southern border provinces will go to Malaysia on an exchange programme sponsored by the government, according to Foreign Ministry spokesman Kitti Wasinondh. The exchange programme was put forward by Prime Minister Surayud Chulanont during his meeting with Malaysian Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi on Oct 28. It was hoped that the visits would bring about better understanding between the two countries and broaden the young participants’ outlook.

The Foreign Ministry will work with the Education Ministry and the Southern Border Province Administrative Centre (SBPAC) to select students aged between 15-18 to take part in the programme.

They will go to the Malaysian state of Kedah and visit a secondary school. While there, they will have a chance to learn about the peaceful coexistence of Buddhists and Muslims in the state which borders Thailand, according to Mr Kitti. They will then go on to Penang, where Muslims and Chinese have lived side by side for decades. After that, they will go to Kuala Lumpur and Putrajaya to visit a religious school and an Islamic university.

Mr Kitti said that the exchange programme would show the young participants how moderate Islam could be integrated into modern education, economic development, science and technology. “We want them to bring back what they learn on the trip and use that in their study. We also want them to see how people of different ethnicity and religion in Malaysia can live together in peace and harmony. That’s a positive example,” added the spokesman.
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Southeast Asia
No peace in sight for southern Thailand
2006-10-27
By Shawn W Crispin

If Thailand's new military-appointed interim government is suing for peace with the Malay Muslim insurgent groups ravaging the country's three southernmost provinces, nobody apparently told the rebels. One month since military coup-makers ousted prime minister Thaksin Shinawatra and vowed to reconcile Bangkok with the historically restive region, the security situation has only gone from bad to worse.

While new Thai Prime Minister Surayud Chulanont met last week
in Kuala Lumpur with his Malaysian counterpart Abdullah Badawi to discuss possible peace strategies, insurgents added at least another 23 murders to the conflict's spiraling death toll, which, according to one independent estimate, has surpassed 2,300, substantially higher than the 1,700 figure that the Thai government acknowledges. The local and international media have misread the significance of the Thai government's recent peace overtures.

Significantly, Surayud purposely refrained from mentioning former Malaysian prime minister Mahathir Mohamad's recent mediation effort, which was launched clandestinely in August and entailed meetings between insurgent leaders and Thai intelligence agents on Malaysia's Langkawi Island. Mahathir's efforts were not endorsed by Kuala Lumpur and were apparently arranged more with a view to upstage his successor Abdullah than to establish a legitimate peace process, according to people familiar with the situation. Mahathir's initiative also managed to complicate parallel mediation efforts that were already under way, and his brusque handling alienated some insurgent groups when he suggested that they lay down their arms as a goodwill gesture before proposed formal talks began.

The hard reality, according to those involved with ongoing mediation efforts, is that peace is still a long way off for southern Thailand. Insurgent groups are deeply entrenched and have achieved total control in areas along the Thai-Malaysian border in Narathiwat province, where Thai soldiers reportedly dare not patrol. Although Kuala Lumpur steadfastly denies it, Malay insurgent groups often plan attacks and take sanctuary from Thai reprisals in remote areas of Kelantan province in northern Malaysia, according to people who have met with the rebels.

Nearly three years into the renewed conflict, Thai officials still do not have a clear idea concerning who exactly they should be negotiating with to stop the violence. Thailand's shadowy insurgency notably lacks any charismatic leaders and is being perpetuated by a number of different autonomous rebel groups, some of which share divergent outlooks and competitive objectives for the resistance.

When former Thai insurgent Wan Kadir Che Man told journalists on the sidelines of an academic conference in Malaysia in 2004 that he controlled insurgents and was willing to negotiate an end to the conflict in exchange for more regional autonomy, his shirt-tie-and-jacket look didn't jibe with the Islamic flavor of the rebel groups. Thai officials later discovered that the aged insurgent, who at the time was serving as an academic at Malaya University, had closer links to Malaysia's special-branch police than to Thai insurgent groups, and they immediately broke off communications with the ethnic-Malay Thai national.

Thailand's inability to gain any traction in behind-the-scenes talks is reflective of the resistance movement's complicated fragmentation. According to people familiar with the situation, certain insurgent-group representatives will not attend meetings if other groups are also invited. That is, rather than a united front, as the umbrella rebel group's Bersatu name translates in the local Yawi language, Thailand's Muslim insurgents often don't see eye-to-eye, which has complicated past efforts to work toward a blanket solution for the conflict.

Fresh start, same result

Surayud has signaled that he wishes to make a clean break from Thaksin's heavy-handed policies, which arguably tipped the restive region back into conflict. This week he announced plans for restoring the Southern Border Provinces Administrative Center and possibly later the Combined 43rd Civilian-Police-Military Command, agencies that had successfully mediated between Bangkok and local Muslim leaders before Thaksin unilaterally dismantled them in April 2002.

But a return to the status quo ante likely won't be enough to settle what has arguably morphed into a full-blown insurrection. Thailand's southern Muslim communities earlier took seriously the decentralization articles enshrined in the 1997 constitution, which among other democratizing measures opened the way for Muslim dress codes in state schools, greater liberty to use the local Yawi language, and access to radio airwaves for local groups to broadcast Islamic sermons and programs. Those local-level reforms were slowly but surely bringing the country's long-marginalized Muslims into the national fold and had undermined the influence and clout of violence-bent insurgent groups, which had largely been consigned to the political and, in certain cases, literal wilderness.

Thaksin's policies violently reversed many of those democratic gains by reinforcing the Thai state's authority, centralization and regulation over the region. The reform rollback included the harassment and profiling of Islamic teachers and schools, and as insurgents regrouped and steadily escalated the violence, detention without trial, commando-style apprehension and disappearance, and in some cases torture of suspected Muslim militants.

Unfortunately for Surayud, most southern Thai Muslims' and even certain insurgent group leaders' complaints and grievances are pinned directly to the on-the-ground security forces he now commands and hopes to rehabilitate to forge peace rather than sow violence across the region. His military-appointed government is confronted with a population that remains highly reluctant to cooperate with state agents, lest they be accused of cooperating with its proven abusive tendencies.

One possible path to peace and reconciliation would be greater mobilization of royal symbolism, from which his military-appointed government derives much of its legitimacy. His Majesty King Bhumibol Adulyadej, although the most potent symbol of the Buddhist-majority Thai state, is known to be highly revered among the region's Muslims. Insurgent leaders have largely refrained from overtly criticizing the monarch, who local Muslims often note oversaw the first translation of the Koran into the Thai language. The palace has also shelled out variously for the construction of mosques across the country, and the respected monarch sometimes officiates at Koran recitals during important Muslim rites and rituals.

That said, it's not clear stronger royal signals would necessarily break the impasse. One indication: the status of the royally appointed Chularajamontri, Thai Muslims' top spiritual leader, has come under fire from many Muslims who view him as too close to the central government and too distant from his adherents. Adding fuel to those fiery perceptions, the current Chularajamontri offered only muted criticism after the military's April 2004 destruction of the highly venerated Krue Se Mosque in Pattani province during a massive siege against a group of lightly armed rebels that had holed up in the ancient structure.

Surayud recently said without elaborating that he would be willing to consider as part of a peace deal an autonomy package similar to the one Indonesia brokered last year to end its 30-year conflict against rebels in Aceh province. But according to people familiar with the situation, those in Surayud's inner circle are still highly reluctant to enact any sort of regional autonomy that from their perspective could eventually jeopardize the territorial integrity of the kingdom.

Indeed, by shredding the 1997 constitution and appointing mainly conservatives to the body drafting the new constitution, the prevailing political winds are blowing against fully reinstating even the local-autonomy measures that were enshrined in the previous progressive charter, which significantly had paved the way for local democracy and peace to take root in the region. And so, despite the new government's change in tone, there is still no clear end in sight for Thailand's spiraling southern conflict.

Shawn W Crispin is Asia Times Online's Southeast Asia editor.
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Southeast Asia
Lee Kuan Yew sends reply to Malay PM
2006-10-01
Singapore's founding father and Minister Mentor Lee Kuan Yew has written to Malaysian Prime Minister Datuk Seri Abdullah Ahmad Badawi over his recent remarks about the Chinese being marginalised in Malaysia.
“My neighbours both have problems with their Chinese. They are successful, they're hardworking and therefore they are systematically marginalised, even in education. And they want Singapore, to put it simply, to be like their Chinese, compliant...”
The Straits Times quoted Lee's press secretary, Y. Y. Yeong as saying the letter was now with the Singapore High Commission in Kuala Lumpur. "(It) is ready to be personally conveyed to Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi," she said.

Abdullah wrote to Lee last week seeking clarification over the controversial remarks. On Sept 15, Lee, 83, told a forum on good governance that the attitude of Malaysia and Indonesia towards the republic was shaped by the way they treated their Chinese communities. "My neighbours both have problems with their Chinese. They are successful, they're hardworking and therefore they are systematically marginalised, even in education. And they want Singapore, to put it simply, to be like their Chinese, compliant," Lee had said.

The remarks drew protests from Malaysia and Indonesia, with the foreign ministries of both countries summoning Singaporean envoys to explain Lee's remarks.
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Southeast Asia
Southeast Asian jihadis dispatched for global war on Israel
2006-08-03
HUNDREDS of Southeast Asian suicide bombers have been dispatched around the world with a mission to attack Jewish interests in countries that support Israel such as Britain, the US and possibly Australia.

The radical Jakarta-based Asian Muslim Youth Movement gave The Australian details of the plot yesterday, claiming it was being funded in part with cash donations from two unnamed Australian-Indonesian businessmen.

The leader of the AMYM, Islamist author Suaib Bidu, warned that thousands more jihadis were preparing to join the resistance against Israel and die as"martyrs".

Mr Bidu said a "passing-out" ceremony for more than 3000 jihadis would be held tomorrow in the Indonesian city of Pontianak on the large northern island of Kalimantan.

But only about 200 would be sent immediately to targets aboard, with the remainder being active supporters.

Mr Bidu warned that his group would "monitor" the position of Australia towards Israel's current military operation in southern Lebanon, and that it too could become a target for suicide attacks.

"We have a lot of support, including in Australia, from people who don't believe Israel's attack (on Hezbollah) is just," Mr Bidu said.

Terrorism experts have warned that the radical group had the motivation and the backing to organise such a campaign of terror.

One of the foremost scholars in militant Islam, Zachary Abuza, described the group as a dangerous threat that deserved to be taken seriously.

"These people are willing to martyr themselves and that just feeds on itself," Dr Abuza told The Australian. "Events like this (the Lebanon conflict) are superb tools for recruiting and indoctrinating people."

He said the group had been active in Southeast Asia before and said Israeli sites in the region could be targeted.

Dr Abuza said the move could also have far-reaching ramifications because it gave the Southeast Asian militants the ability to network with jihadis in the Middle East.

Last night, Malaysian Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi said there were fears a "new wave" of terrorists could be generated by the Israeli offensive in Lebanon.

"Muslims are angry even in moderate Muslim countries," said Mr Abdullah, who hosted an emergency meeting of the 57 nations of the Organisation of the Islamic Conference.

And in Cairo, the leader of Egypt's extremist Muslim Brotherhood, Mohammed Mehdi Akef, said he was ready to send 10,000 fighters to Lebanon to battle Israel alongside Hezbollah.

But he admitted the chances were slim that any volunteers from Egypt would reach Lebanon.

"There are enough people but you would need Arab regimes to authorise their deployment or at least turn a blind eye on their departure," Mr Akef said.

The head of the International Centre for Terrorism and Political Violence Research's Institute of Defence and Strategic Studies, Rohan Gunaratna, said the jihadis in Southeast Asia could quickly develop the capability to carry out their plan in so-called third-country attacks.

Although he said the numbers of recruits were probably being exaggerated to "provoke fear and anxiety", the group should not be underestimated.

Dr Gunaratna said the AMYM had sent fighters to Iraq in the past, albeit in small numbers.

The group has already sent 217 suicide bombers, including 72 Indonesians as well as citizens of six other Southeast Asian nations, to Malaysia, Thailand and the Philippines, Mr Bidu said.

They include seasoned mujaheddin fighters, some of whom had fought the Soviets in Afghanistan and then the Northern Alliance in the same country.

Mr Bidu said they were on a mission to infiltrate Israel and its allies "with the help of friendly networks".

"They will be charged with destroying infrastructure targets of Israel and its supporters, such as Britain and the US," he said.

Ayman al-Zawahiri, al-Qa'ida's second in charge, has already called for Sunni Muslims across the world to wage jihad against Israel.

The move comes as another group of fighters from a separate body known as the Islamic Defenders Front (FPI) announced it had 200,000 members ready to join the battlefield in southern Lebanon.

"When we apply for passports we say we are going to Singapore or to Mecca, so that we can fulfil our true aims'" FPI spokesman Habib Hasan al-Jufrie said.

He said the FPI held military training courses "at secret locations" every two weeks. The FPI is thought to be involved in gangster activity and extortion and protection rackets in the Indonesian capital. It attracts most of its support through advocating jihad to the nation's Muslim majority.

The AMYM and FPI have been blatant in their past condemnation of the US and its Middle Eastern policies. The AMYM has allegedly previously threatened to attack US interests in Jakarta and has sent fighters to the conflicts in Bosnia and Chechnya.

About 40 per cent of the AMYM recruits have military experience in countries including Afghanistan, Thailand, The Philippines, Palestine and Iraq. Those with field experience have learned how to make suicide bombs.

Mr Bidu said the fighters from his movement would not travel to Lebanon "because we don't want to face Israel from the front; we prefer to do it from behind".

A spokesman for the spiritual leader of Jemaah Islamiah, Abu Bakar Bashir, said the cleric "fully supports opposing through jihad".
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Southeast Asia
Cartoon controversy may spur SE Asian jihadis
2006-02-22
While the protests over the cartoons of the Prophet Mohammed have spread to Southeast Asia, they have been smaller and less lethal than in other parts of the world. Yet, especially in Indonesia, a number of small hard-line groups and militant organizations have been at the forefront of the demonstrations and are effectively mobilizing themselves over the furor. These groups have been probing society looking for ways to inject themselves into the mainstream.

Demonstrations in Southeast Asia began on February 3 in Indonesia, when the Islamic Defenders Front (FPI) mobilized 300 people to demonstrate in front of the Danish Embassy, briefly entering the lobby of the office building which houses the embassy. The Danish ambassador defused the situation after meeting with several protestors and offered an apology. On February 5, the demonstrations spread to Indonesia's second largest city and commercial hub, Surabaya. At least 200 protesters stoned the Danish Consulate before descending on the U.S. Consulate, where police had to fire warning shots to disperse them. According to the February 14-20 edition of the Jakarta-based publication Tempo, on February 10 the "quietest" Islamic organization Hizb ut-Tahrir led a protest of 2,000 in downtown Jakarta.

In Malaysia, the protests began in early February on a small scale, although by the second week they had grown to over 3,000 people. These were the largest demonstrations in Malaysia since the protests over the sacking of the popular deputy prime minister, Anwar Ibrahim, in 1999. Although the demonstrations were peaceful, they were also checked by a very robust security presence.

Protests have also spread to the Muslim minority states of Thailand and the Philippines, both of which are plagued by Islamic insurgencies in their restive southern regions. On February 6, 300-400 Muslims from the troubled south protested outside the Danish Embassy in Bangkok. Demonstrations were also organized in the southern Philippine city of Cotabato. Although a Muslim member of parliament organized the demonstration, placards menacingly threatened to "Behead those who insult Islam," according to the Philippine Daily Inquirer on February 15. Hundreds of other protestors burnt Danish flags in front of Manila's main mosque.

In Malaysia, the demonstrations have been somewhat spontaneous, emanating from mosques after Friday prayers. In Malaysia, where the government has draconian laws at its disposal and is guarded against Islamic militancy, there is no evidence that militant organizations are behind the unrest. Indeed, even the Islamic opposition party, PAS, has been notably quiet. The PAS daily, Harakah, has carried stories on the cartoon furor, but for the most part has focused on the situation abroad for fear of the government accusing them of inciting sectarian conflict (http://www.harakahdaily.net). On February 17, Harakah carried stories about demonstrations against the U.S., in which an effigy of President Bush was burnt, but it was clear to disavow PAS' role in organizing the protest.

Likewise, in the Philippines and Thailand there is no evidence that any of the secessionist organizations have been behind demonstrations. Surprisingly, the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF) has not even posted a story about the cartoon controversy on its website—located at http://www.luwaran.com—out of fear of giving skeptics in the government any reason to view MILF as radicals and thus scuttling the peace talks. While the secessionists in Thailand and the Philippines do not appear to have a hand in the protests, it is clear that they are benefiting from public anger and perceptions that the West is truly Islamaphobic; this plays into the broader popular sentiment that the war on terrorism is patently anti-Muslim. The secessionist organizations have always presented themselves as the defenders of Islam and its honor.

The situation in Indonesia is more troubling. The hard-line FPI organized the first demonstrations. The FPI is the leading anti-American and Western movement in the country. It has organized large demonstrations condemning the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan and Iraq. Its leader, Habib Rizieq, has repeatedly demanded that the government cut all ties and cooperation with the U.S. The FPI recruited several hundred mujahideen to fight the Americans in Iraq, but only a few actually made it there.

The FPI was also at the forefront of attacks against a Muslim sect, Jemaah Ahmadiyah, and in early July 2005 several hundred FPI members led a group of 1,000 vigilantes to attack the Ahmadiyah annual congress that was being held in Bogor (Jakarta Post, September 21, 2005; Straits Times, July 28, 2005). The FPI has also led attacks on the offices and threatened the physical safety of members of the secular organization Liberal Islam Network (Jakarta Post, September 7, 2005). The FPI has also supported the sectarian strife in the Malukus and in Central Sulawesi where Indonesia's primary terrorist organization, Jemaah Islamiyah, is fomenting strife in an attempt to regroup.

While the demonstrations themselves were not overly threatening, those behind the unrest in Indonesia suggest that the situation will become more violent. As stated in the Financial Times on February 12, there were allegedly telephone threats to the Danish Embassy in Jakarta threatening violence and reportedly terrorism. According to a February 13 article in Singapore's Today, Denmark ordered its diplomats to be evacuated and called on its citizens to leave Indonesia "because of a significant and imminent danger for Danes and Danish interests in Indonesia." Later, 175 students in a Surabaya madrassa signed a pact saying that they were "ready to die" for the Prophet Mohammed. On February 19, some 200 members of the FPI attacked the U.S. Embassy in Jakarta with stones. One organizer told the press, "This is not the last warning. This is only the beginning. There will be bigger actions against them." In short, this has the potential to become more violent and will target broader Western interests (Tempo, February 14-20).

In response to the cartoon controversy, authorities clamped down on the press. In Malaysia, the government suspended the publication and forced the resignation of the editor of a small daily, The Sarawak Tribune, for his "insensitive and irresponsible" publication of the cartoons (AP, February 9). On February 9, Malaysia "declared it an offense for anyone to publish, produce, import, circulate or possess the caricatures" (Human Rights Watch, February 15). Days later, a Chinese-language magazine, Guangming, was reportedly shut down for simply showing a picture of a reader of a newspaper overseas looking at the cartoons. In Indonesia, the editor of a Christian magazine, Gloria, was sacked for running three of the 12 cartoons. Additionally, a tabloid, Peta, was withdrawn from circulation and the editor charged with blasphemy (Reporters Without Borders, February 10).

The protests in Southeast Asia are gaining traction and allowing Islamists to forge both a greater sense of solidarity and identification with their co-religionists around the world. This reinforces the already high-degree of anti-Americanism prevalent in the region. More importantly, it gives radicals and Muslim moderates a common cause and deepens the potential pool of recruitment for the Islamists. The protests could also become a pretext for violence, especially by groups like the FPI.

Yet, Southeast Asia also provides a way forward. A spokesman for Indonesia's largest and decidedly moderate Muslim Organization, the Nadhlatul Ulama, called for calm and for Muslims not to be provoked by what he called "the stupid actions of those who belittle our Prophet" (Laksamana.net, February 10). Even Din Syamsuddin, the head of the second largest Muslim organization, who has hard-line Islamist tendencies, stated, "Do not go overboard and get trapped into a situation that can be used by elements bent on painting an image of Indonesia's Islam as intolerant, rigid and anarchic society [sic]."

On the other hand, while the Malaysian government is working to diffuse the situation, Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi has warned of a "huge chasm that has emerged between the West and Islam," as Westerners see Muslims as "congenital terrorist[s]." He further stated that the "demonization of Islam and the vilification of Muslims, there is no denying, is widespread within mainstream Western society" (BBC, February 10).
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