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Southeast Asia
Hunt for another JI leader
2010-03-12
[Straits Times] SUSPICION is mounting that the fugitive militant Umar Patek may be in Aceh, after word spread on Wednesday that the Indonesian counter-terrorism force was hot on his trail.

Umar was a key leader of the regional terror network Jemaah Islamiah (JI) in Indonesia until he fled to the southern Philippines in 2003.

He is thought to have returned to Indonesia last year with another fugitive JI member, Dulmatin, the 40-year-old bomb-maker who was shot dead on Tuesday in West Jakarta.

Security experts predicted yesterday that it would not be long before Umar, 40, was caught if he was in Indonesia.

Security analyst Ken Conboy, referring to Indonesia's crack anti-terror squad, said: 'With only 10 days to go before Obama gets here, you can be sure Densus 88 (Detachment 88) is working overtime to follow up on any leads they have.'

United States President Barack Obama is scheduled to make an official visit to Jakarta and Bali next weekend.
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Southeast Asia
Indonesia Must Hit Terrorism at Its Roots by Tackling Recruitment at Islamic Schools
2009-08-12
Noordin M Top has certainly lived by the sword, so it would have been fitting if he had met his demise amid a hail of bullets and bomb explosions inside a farmhouse in Central Java over the weekend.

It seems certain that the alleged mastermind of the July 17 twin suicide bombings in South Jakarta — as well as other attacks in the capital and on Bali — is still at large. Aside from his fanatical, extremist interpretations of Islam and willingness to kill scores of civilians in pursuit of his goals, Noordin is considered even more dangerous for his ability to recruit pawns to carry out attacks, in particular young suicide bombers.

It was likely his followers would attempt to carry on his work in the event he was captured or killed.

“His legend would rise. It would be a great recruiting tool,” said Ken Conboy, author of “Inside Jemaah Islamiyah, Asia’s Most Dangerous Terrorist Network.”

Tracking down and rolling up Noordin’s network — and the man himself given that DNA tests are expected to come back negative — is the job of Detachment 88, the National Police counter-terrorism unit. But analysts say the central government must take a long-term view of the country’s terrorism problem and begin tackling it at its source.

Terrorism’s roots, they say, lie within the country’s Islamic boarding schools. According to Sidney Jones of the International Crisis Group, about 50 pesantrens are believed linked to Jemaah Islamiyah, the regional terrorist network of which Noordin was once a key member.

“The schools are still important, less for what they teach than for the connections made there,” said Jones, a JI expert. “It’s not so much ‘massive’ recruiting that’s the problem, but more that I would place the santri [orthodox Muslims] at these schools near the top of vulnerable populations for recruitment. And it only takes a visit by one extremist to bring a couple more on board.”

Indonesia has as many as 45,000 Islamic boarding schools, Jones said, but only about 15,000 are registered with the Ministry of Religious Affairs. Analysts have criticized the ministry for not overseeing the schools’ curriculums, which could be blinds for private study sessions for handpicked students with extremist teachers.

Despite the difficulties the government would have intervening in Islamic schools, Nasaruddin Umar, the Religious Affairs Ministry’s director general for mass guidance on Islam, said expanded oversight was inevitable. “We have to control the curriculums of all the pesantrens. I have found many, many problems,” he said.
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Southeast Asia
Indonesia: Splinter groups pose new terror threat, says expert
2007-10-09
The fragmentation of the Islamic terrorist group, Jemaah Islamiah, poses a major new security threat for Indonesia and its neighbors, according to terrorism expert, Sidney Jones.

Jones, director of the International Crisis Group's South-East Asian office, says JI is no longer the biggest threat to Western targets and civilians but a number of splinter groups are now capable of causing serious attacks. "The risk of an attack on civilians endorsed by the JI leadership is now very low," Jones told The Australian, a national daily. "The biggest threat now is that the younger militants of JI could be used as a recruiting pool for splinter groups like that of (Bali bomber) Noordin Top." Top, an explosives expert, was alleged to be one of the masterminds of the 2002 Bali bombing which killed 202 people and injured over 200 others. Top is still a fugitive and among the most wanted men in Asia.

Jones told The Australian that Top and his followers were still interested in launching attacks on Westerners. Since the 2002 attack, more than 400 members of the terrorist organisation are reported to have been arrested across four countries.

Ken Conboy, an author who has written about terrorism, told Adnkronos International (AKI) that the splinter groups could put together a team like the one that carried out the small scale bombings in Bali in 2005. On October 1 2005, bombs exploded at two sites in Jimbaran and Kuta, in Bali. Twenty people were killed, and 129 people were injured by three bombers who killed themselves in the attacks. Conboy, the author of 'The Second Front - Inside Asia's Most Dangerous Terrorist Network', says the Indonesian police have done a good job in cracking down on terrorists. "It is right to praise the Indonesian police that in the last two years has managed to stop any attacks," he told AKI.
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Southeast Asia
Indonesia: Arrested Terror Suspects Just Foot Soldiers, Expert Says
2007-04-07
(AKI) - Recent police anti-terror raids in Indonesia have been important but the risk of attacks remains high, according to Ken Conboy, an expert on Islamic terrorism in southeast Asia. "The raids led to the seizing of a high quantity of explosives. But I am not sure those arrested knew exactly what they were doing. I believe they are just labourers," Conboy told Adnkronos International (AKI). Conboy also said he did not believe that terror group Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) had created a cell to kill members of a special anti-terror squad of the Indonesian police, the Detachment 88, as reported by the local media.

According to the reports, the terror cell is called Qoriya, or Ascari. "It is not like the JI," said the analyst, the author of 'The Second Front: Inside Asia's Most Dangerous Terrorist Network', a book on the history of Jemaah Islamiyah. "Moreover, Ascari is not a new group; it is a name that has been around for a while. JI's main targets remain Western interests in Indonesia. The group has in the past attacked policemen but it would not even have the capabilities to track down Detachment 88."

Detachment 88 has carried out a number of raids at the end of March near Yogyakarta, Central Java. The raids have led to the arrest of seven suspects and the death of an alleged militant. Police also confiscated a cache of weapons and explosives. In contradictory statements, the police have said in the past few days both that the explosives were to be employed in a large scale attack similar to the one carried out in Bali in 2002, or in an attack Poso, in the Sulawesi province, a key JI base.
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Southeast Asia
Imprisoned JI members' release may lead to new attacks in Indonesia
2006-03-16
The recent release from prison of dozens of terrorists in Indonesia, has sparked concern that this may be a prelude to a new wave of attacks. "They served their time according to the law and there is not much that can be done about it," Ken Conboy, a seasoned expert on terrorism in the region told Adnkronos International (AKI). "It is right that they are released but the danger of them falling back into terrorism is real," he said.

Dozens of terrorists arrested in Indonesia in the past few years were released in the past few months after they had served their short sentences in the prisons of Jakarta.

Among them was Abu Rusdan, who experts believe is the one who took control of the regional terrorist group, Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) after the arrest of their spiritual leader Abu Bakar Bashir in 2002. According to the Indonesian police, Rusdan himself was succeeded by Abu Dujana as the leader of the group.

"Dujana has been known for a while but I am not too sure whether he is the new operative head of the group," said Conboy who is also the author of a book entitled “The Second Front: Inside Jemaah Islamiyah”, a book that traces the recent history of the Asian terrorist organisation, which has links to the al-Qaeda network.

Like Abu Rusdan, who was released on good behaviour in January after serving three and a half years in jail for having hidden one of the fugitives of the 2002 Bali Bombings, tens of other convicted terrorists are now at large.

"There are lots of them who are being released. The Indonesian intelligence does not have the resources to follow them all," said Conboy, stressing yet againt that the "danger is high".

In an attempt to ease public concern, the Indonesian police said that all those released are still being closely monitored.

Conboy is however not particularly concerned about the imminent release of Abu Bakar Bashir, the radical cleric and spiritual leader of JI and was condemned to 30 months in prison for having "instigated" that attacks in Bali in 2002 which killed more than 200 people. After a series of remissions of his jai sentence, Bashir will be freed later this year in June.

"Bashir has never been directly involved in running the organization. If anything, he is the ideologist and whether in prison or out it does not make much difference," said Conboy.
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Southeast Asia
High Risk Of Attacks With Release Of Terrorists
2006-03-15
The recent release from prison of dozens of terrorists in Indonesia, has sparked concern that this may be a prelude to a new wave of attacks. "They served their time according to the law and there is not much that can be done about it," Ken Conboy, a seasoned expert on terrorism in the region told Adnkronos International (AKI). "It is right that they are released but the danger of them falling back into terrorism is real," he said.

Dozens of terrorists arrested in Indonesia in the past few years were released in the past few months after they had served their short sentences in the prisons of Jakarta. Among them was Abu Rusdan, who experts believe is the one who took control of the regional terrorist group, Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) after the arrest of their spiritual leader Abu Bakar Bashir in 2002. According to the Indonesian police, Rusdan himself was succeeded by Abu Dujana as the leader of the group.

"Dujana has been known for a while but I am not too sure whether he is the new operative head of the group," said Conboy who is also the author of a book entitled “The Second Front: Inside Jemaah Islamiyah”, a book that traces the recent history of the Asian terrorist organisation, which has links to the al-Qaeda network.

Like Abu Rusdan, who was released on good behaviour in January after serving three and a half years in jail for having hidden one of the fugitives of the 2002 Bali Bombings, tens of other convicted terrorists are now at large. "There are lots of them who are being released. The Indonesian intelligence does not have the resources to follow them all," said Conboy, stressing yet againt that the "danger is high". In an attempt to ease public concern, the Indonesian police said that all those released are still being closely monitored.

Conboy is however not particularly concerned about the imminent release of Abu Bakar Bashir, the radical cleric and spiritual leader of JI and was condemned to 30 months in prison for having "instigated" that attacks in Bali in 2002 which killed more than 200 people. After a series of remissions of his jai sentence, Bashir will be freed later this year in June. "Bashir has never been directly involved in running the organization. If anything, he is the ideologist and whether in prison or out it does not make much difference," said Conboy.
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Southeast Asia
Malaysia holding members of the would-be West Coast terror cell
2006-02-12
Malaysia is holding several members of an al Qaeda suicide cell that U.S. President George W. Bush says planned to launch a Sept. 11-style attack on Los Angeles, a security official familiar with the case told Reuters.

The plot to hijack a plane and fly it into Los Angeles' tallest building was set in motion a month after the 2001 attacks on New York and Washington, and was thwarted in early 2002, according to Bush.

A Southeast Asian intelligence official said at least three members of a Southeast Asian cell earmarked to carry out the attack on the West Coast were being held in Malaysia under the Internal Security Act, which allows detention without trial.

"One guy was given money to go for pilot training," said the official, who has proven reliable in the past.

He said the would-be pilot, Zaini Zakaria, was arrested in 2002, and the others were probably chosen to play supporting roles in the hijacking.

Members of the cell fled to Malaysia from Afghanistan after the United States began bombing al Qaeda and Taliban forces there in October 2001.

"They were told to... await instructions. They were supposed to meet up again to carry out a second (suicide airliner) operation," the official said.

Diplomats say security agencies in mostly Muslim Malaysia were very cooperative in sharing counter-terrorism intelligence information with their U.S. counterparts after Sept. 11, 2001.

Malaysia is holding 66 detainees suspected of links to al Qaeda and and its Southeast Asian branch, Jemaah Islamiah.

The Malaysian government declined to comment.

"We don't comment on detainees or divulge information concerning detainees," a spokesman for the office of Prime Minister Abdullah Ahmad Badawi said.

According to Frances Townsend, Bush's homeland security and counterterrorism adviser, the West Coast plot was initially to have been part of the Sept. 11 attacks.

But al Qaeda chief Osama bin Laden decided to focus on the East Coast as it was too difficult to get operatives for both.

The planned attack on Los Angeles was hatched by Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, the mastermind of the Sept. 11 attacks, who was arrested in Pakistan in 2003 and is in U.S. custody.

The hijack team was recruited by Jemaah Islamiah commander Riduan Isamuddin, better known as Hambali, who was arrested in August 2003 near Bangkok and is also in U.S. custody.

The hijackers were to use bombs hidden in shoes to breach the cockpit door of an airplane before flying it into Los Angeles' 1,017-feet (310-metre) high Library Tower, now the US Bank Tower.

The cell was broken and the arrests made between 2002 and 2003.

"It was a legit plot," said Ken Conboy, a Jakarta-based security expert who has written several books on defence, intelligence and security issues. "Whether they would have been able to get these guys actually in the States is another deal.

"It was envisioned as a second wave after 9/11, and he (Khalid Sheikh Mohammed) wanted to use Southeast Asians because he thought they could get into the U.S. and hijack the planes more so than Arabs because the U.S. would be more on alert to Arabs after 9/11," Conboy said.

In December 2001, Malaysia made its first breakthrough against al Qaeda in Southeast Asia with the arrest of Yazid Sufaat, a former Malaysian army captain, who recently returned from Afghanistan.

Sufaat hosted two of Sept. 11 hijackers, Khalid al-Midhar and Nawaf al-Hazmi, when they passed through Kuala Lumpur almost a year before the attacks on the Twin Towers and the Pentagon.

He is also believed to have supplied money and travel documents in Malaysia to Zacarias Moussaoui, a Frenchman of Moroccan descent who was arrested in the United States before the Sept. 11 attacks.

Moussaoui denies he was to have participated in the Sept. 11 strikes but says he was part of a broader conspiracy to conduct subsequent attacks.
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Southeast Asia
How the US stopped Hambali
2006-02-11
IT should have been no surprise that the Southeast Asian terror group Jemaah Islamiah and its operations chief Hambali were named by US President George W. Bush as the figures behind a 2002 plot to fly a plane into California's tallest building.

JI and Hambali, mastermind of the Bali bombing, were not only intimately connected with al-Qa'ida's chief strategist Khalid Sheik Mohammed in the plan to destroy the US Bank Tower in Los Angeles, they had been in cahoots for years, planning to blow up US airliners and fly them into skyscrapers.

As far back as 1995, Mohammed and Hambali put together a terror blueprint that has become known as Operation Bojinka. It was a three-pronged plan to assassinate Pope John Paul II during a visit to Manila, blow up 11 US planes and fly a Cessna packed with explosives into the CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia.

But for the second wave of attacks on the US, planned for 2002, they had decided to avoid operatives with Arab backgrounds. Instead, Hambali recruited a Malaysian militant named Zaini Zakaria to head the cell responsible for flying a plane into the LA skyscraper, then known as the Library Tower. Mr Bush released details of the planned attack on Thursday, naming JI and Hambali and saying it illustrated the need to move swiftly against any suspicious terrorist activity.

"It took the combined efforts of several countries to break up this plot," the President said. "By working together, we stopped a catastrophic attack on our homeland."

While it might have come as a revelation to the Americans that a Southeast Asian terror group might be targeting US interests, it was no surprise to Australian and Asian intelligence agencies who have been hunting JI for years.

JI operates mainly in Indonesia and The Philippines and is blamed for a string of attacks including the 2002 Bali bombing, which killed 202 people, among them 88 Australians.

The terror group has also been accused of staging the October 2004 bombing of the Australian embassy in Jakarta, the Marriott Hotel bombing and three suicide bombings in Bali last October that killed four Australians.

Its former director of operations Riduan Isamuddin, better known as Hambali, was considered the link man between JI and al-Qa'ida and he had been crucial to plans by JI to set up terror cells.

Intelligence documents have revealed that JI had divided its operations into four major cells, known as mantiqis, and Mantiqi 4 covered the Indonesian province of Papua and Australia.

In preparation for his plans, Hambali had sent terrorist trainer Azman Hashim to Australia to run a paramilitary weapons training camp for Australians in the Blue Mountains.

Hambali also organised for twins Abdul Rahim Ayub and Abdul Rahman Ayub to further the JI cause in Australia. They lived in Sydney and Perth. Both brothers have since left the country. One of them is now on the Phillipine island of Mindanao training terrorist recruits.

The US Government's 2004 9/11 commission report detailed the close links that developed between Hambali and Mohammed in the late 1990s. "Hambali did not originally orient JI's operations toward attacking the United States, but his involvement with al-Qa'ida appears to have inspired him to pursue American targets.

"Hambali's newfound interest in striking against the US manifested itself in a spate of terrorist plans. Fortunately none came to fruition," the report concluded in an oblique reference to what could have been the LA plot.

The commission said Mohammed, when interrogated by US agents, had taken credit for Hambali's shift of focus, claiming to have urged the JI operations chief to concentrate on attacks on the US economy.

The al-Qa'ida-JI partnership led to a number of proposals that would marry al-Qa'ida's financial and technical strength with JI's access to materials and local operatives, with Hambali in the critical role of co-ordinator.

According to terrorism expert Rohan Gunaratna, Hambali played a key role in Operation Bojinka. He said the plot was to involve a sequence of events from the assassination of Pope John Paul II in The Philippines on January 15 to the bombing of 11 airliners on January 21 and 22 followed by the flying of a Cessna packed with explosives into CIA headquarters in Langley, Virginia.

But the plot came undone after a fire in a Manila apartment on January 6, 1995. Police discovered evidence of the plot on a computer in the apartment and the operation was abandoned. But plans to blow up planes and fly them into buildings continued. And in the wake of the September 11 attacks, Hambali and Mohammed began hatching the Library Tower plan.

It has been revealed that they established a cell and four terrorists were being trained to carry out the attack, which included using shoe bombs to break into to an aeroplane cockpit.

The JI operatives trained in Afghanistan and met Osama bin Laden.

The head of the cell also received instructions on the use of shoe bombs from Briton Richard Reid, who in December 2001 tried to blow up an airliner with explosives planted in his shoes.

But the plan was thwarted early in 2002 when a key al-Qa'ida operative was arrested in Southeast Asia. In the subsequent debriefings of this operative, enough information was gleaned to round up the terrorists involved in the plot.

The Bush administration has not revealed the name of this al-Qa'ida operative. But The Weekend Australian has confirmed Mr Bush was almost certainly referring to Zaini Zakaria, a Malaysian recruited by Hambali and sent for pilot training by Mohammed. Zakaria was one of several Malaysians recruited to form a suicide cell for al-Qa'ida, and it is understood he and the others met bin Laden.

Zakaria, who is mentioned in the 9/11 Commission report, was key to the second wave operation against the US planned by Mohammed. The Library Tower attack was planned to follow the September 11 attacks.

Ken Conboy, whose book The Second Front is largely about Hambali, said revelations of the Library Tower plot came from several sources. "They knew about the plot well before Hambali was captured (in Thailand in 2003)," he said.

Conboy said the Library Tower plans were underway before September 11. "The first people got wind of it in late 2001. By spring the next year, the Indonesians were looking into it. It was corroborated when they got Mohammed."

Zakaria is now in detention in Malaysia. Two of the other Malaysian suicide cell recruits, Bashir bin Lap, known as Lillie, and Mohammed Farik bin Amin, known as Zubair, were arrested in Thailand with Hambali. Hambali is in US custody, in an undisclosed location, possibly Jordan.
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Southeast Asia
Indonesians Ask Why Muslims Turn to Bombs
2005-12-05
There's a question for which they need to find an answer ...
PAMARICAN, Indonesia (AP) - Aip Hidayat was a devout Muslim but showed no signs of fanaticism. He did not force his younger sister to wear a head scarf, chastise friends for skipping prayers or get into fiery debates about the U.S. war in Iraq. Yet the 21-year-old became the seventh person to carry out a suicide bombing in Indonesia, something many said was inconceivable just a few years ago.

Hidayat's mother says al-Qaida-linked terrorists recruited her eldest son as a foot soldier for their ``holy war,'' poisoning his views on Islam so he would take part in triple suicide bombings on Oct. 1 that killed 20 people on the resort island of Bali. ``They used him,'' Siti Rokayah, 40, said quietly, sitting on a straw mat in a cramped two bedroom hut, photographs of a smiling and carefree Hidayat scattered before her. ``I hope whoever did this to my son will be arrested and punished.''

Indonesia is the world's most populous Muslim nation, but most people here practice a moderate form of the faith. Still, militant Islam appears to be gaining a strong foothold, with five deadly attacks targeting Western interests since 2002. More than 240 people have died, many of them Indonesians.

The secular government has responded by launching its first-ever campaign against hard-line interpretations of Islam - something it shied away from doing in the past for fear of being seen as subservient to the United States. ``What is happening is that today we arrest 10 people, but the ideology continues and the extremists can recruit 50 more people,'' Vice President Yusuf Kalla said, calling on Islamic leaders and politicians to help change that.

For emphasis, he showed them videotaped confessions of Hidayat and the two other Bali bombers, some of them laughing and saying they expected to go to heaven the next day. ``Not just me, but the clerics, too, were shocked,'' Kalla said.

The Jemaah Islamiyah terrorist network first emerged in the early 1990s with the goal of creating an Islamic state across Southeast Asia. But it has been reinvigorated by U.S. foreign policy in Israel and the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Had to get that canard in, since it's the Associated Press. If it was Roooters, it would have been paragraph #2 ...
``They see themselves as fighting a new world battle. ... They say, we can attack civilians anywhere, just as Americans attack Muslim civilians all over the world,'' said Nasir Abbas, a key Jemaah Islamiyah operative until his arrest in 2003 on immigration charges. ``They say their intention is not to kill Muslims ... but (the) feeling is: 'We are in battle, we use anything we have, anything we are able to do, we do,''' said Abbas, who cooperating with police to expose the inner workings of the network.

Hundreds of Jemaah Islamiyah members have been arrested in a regionwide crackdown and the remaining leaders are on the run, making it hard but not impossible to find new recruits - as the Oct. 1 bombings showed.

In the past, the group relied heavily on a handful of Islamic high schools committed to jihadist principles - the most notorious of which was founded by the group's alleged spiritual leader, Abu Bakar Bashir. It is now under close government watch.

They appear now to be turning to people like Hidayat who, at least outwardly, showed no militant tendencies. ``In at least a couple of cases, it looks like they're going after the lowest common denominator, relatively simple village boys, and recruiting them with frightening ease and dizzying speed,'' said Ken Conboy, author of several books on Southeast Asian terrorism. ``Sometimes the guy's gone for just a few weeks or months and he's strapping bombs to his back.''

Among the promises made to the would-be bombers is that martyrdom is a fast track to heaven - not just for them, but for 72 of their relatives, he and others say.
Wonder which version of the Qu'ran that's in ...
Such a message would resonate with many young men whose families have lived for generations in the same poor village and see little hope of ever making something of themselves, said Solahudin Wahid, vice chairman of the country's largest Islamic organization Nadhlatul Ulama. ``Some of these young men don't have a deep knowledge of Islam and can easily be brainwashed into militancy,'' he said. ``They are easily tantalized. Now it's our turn to teach them. Islam is not like that. Muslims are not allowed to attack if not attacked themselves.''

Still, family and friends in Hidayat's village of Pamarican, surrounded by terraced rice paddies and rich tropical brush, do not understand how it happened to one of their own boys. Though they acknowledge seeing little of Hidayat after he left for Islamic boarding school in 2000, they described the oldest of five children as a shy but serious young man, a good student who might one day become a teacher.

``As a father, what was happened with Aip has made me very worried. Can terrorists do the same to my son?'' said Yayat Suhayat, a neighbor and father of three. ``All parents here have learned a very important lesson. We have to keep a closer eye on our children. ... We can't lose contact with them for even one day.''
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Southeast Asia
Website shows how to stage attacks in Jakarta
2005-11-19
A website purportedly set up under orders from a leading Asian militant gives instructions on how to shoot foreigners in the streets of the Indonesian capital or throw grenades at motorists stuck in traffic. The Web site, called Anshar El Muslimin (www.anshar.net) and seen by Reuters on Friday, contains diagrams of several locations and why they would be ideal for attacking people and how to escape. Police called the website a "work of terror" and said it had been set up by one of three men named suspects this week over the Oct 1. restaurant bombings on Bali that killed 20 people.

Islamic militants linked to al Qaeda have carried out a number of car bombings against Western targets in Indonesia in recent years, but there have been no shootings of foreigners on the streets, a practice seen in parts of the Middle East. Antonius Reniban, police spokesman on the resort island of Bali, said a militant he identified as Abdul Aziz, one of three named suspects over the latest Bali attacks, had confessed to designing the website, which would soon be shut down. "This is a work of terror," Reniban said.

A lawyer for Aziz said his client had been approached several months ago by several people including Malaysia's Noordin M. Top, a senior figure in Jemaah Islamiah, a shadowy group seen as the regional arm of al Qaeda. "Several people came to him and asked him to create that website. One of them was Noordin M. Top," lawyer Muhammad Rifan told Reuters by telephone. "But he only received material supplied by others. A webmaster is not responsible for the content of the website. He is not part of their group." Rifan added that Aziz had no link to the Bali attacks.

One diagram on the Web site showed a computerized schematic of central Jakarta where it said foreigners liked to walk from an office and hotel area to a popular shopping mall. It showed a blue section that it said was the place to attack foreigners. Another showed how foreigners could be shot when they use overhead pedestrian bridges to cross Jakarta's busy roads. It gave specific examples of places in Jakarta where traffic banked up, saying this was ideal to shoot motorists or throw grenades or small bombs at targets. "Grenades can be used to make sure the injured are dead, God Willing. Grenades can be normal grenades or fire bombs so that the car burns," it said.

News of the Web site comes one day after a video was broadcast on local TV showing a masked militant whom police believe is Top. On the video, found last week by Indonesian anti-terrorist police, the masked man warns Western countries, especially Australia, of more attacks. Ken Conboy, a security expert in Jakarta who has seen some of the Web site material, said while it was a concern, it did not mean the types of attacks shown would materialize. He said militants would still need to find good weapons, funding and willing participants to carry out such attacks. "It's obviously disturbing. You don't want to see this sort of stuff on the Internet because you don't want to inspire anyone," Conboy said.

The video was among several found last week as part of raids that resulted in the killing of Malaysian Azahari bin Husin, the master bombmaker of Jemaah Islamiah. It was discovered in central Java at a house police have said was rented by Top.
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Southeast Asia
Still dangerous and elusive
2005-11-12
See wanted poster with pics at link.
By SHEFALI REKHI

JEMAAH Islamiah’s top bomb-maker Dr Azahari Husin may be dead but the group’s mastermind Noordin Mohd Top is still at large and experts say he and other leaders in the terror network remain poised to strike.

Members of the special suicide squad set up by the group could also seek revenge.

Besides bomb-making material found at the house in Batu - where Azahari blew himself up on Wednesday - suggests preparations were underway for fresh attacks.

“Azahari’s death no doubt is a very significant success for the Indonesian police,” said Indonesian expert Sidney Jones.

“But it's also reason to move fast. Azahari, together with Noordin, had set up a special armed cell - the Thoifah Muqatilah or Combat Unit, to train and prepare a fresh batch of Muslim extremists.

“We don’t know who were the members of this unit, we don’t know where they are, but we can expect some killings by those linked to the group to prove a point, to retaliate,” she said in an interview.

Police have some leads on Noordin, Jones said.

One of those arrested in Semarang this week is close to Noordin and could lead the local authorities to the mastermind.

Local reports said three JI supporters - being used as couriers by Azahari and Noordin - were picked up in Semarang, one of whom gave away Azahari’s hideout.

“Noordin must be found, he’s the more dangerous one, Azahari is the techician,” she said.

Other JI leaders also pose a threat.

Among them were Afghan veterans Zulkarnaen, Dulmatin, Umar Patek and Abu Dujana.

Zulkarnaen headed JI’s military wing and set up Laskar Khos - a dedicated suicide squad.

He’s known to have close links to the Al-Qaeda and was sent to Philippines to train Muslim extremists but his whereabouts are not known.

Malaysian nationals Dulmatin - who is a trained explosives expert - and Umar Patek were involved in the first Bali attacks and may also be hiding in the Philippines.

Abu Dujana is believed to a member of JI’s central command, who has participated in planning meetings called by Noordin and Azahari.

The escape of Al Qaeda militant Omar Al Faruq from a prison in Afghanistan in July too adds a new dimension to the security threat.

Faruq was Al Qaeda’s top pointman for Southeast Asia.

Alarmed at some of the revelations he made after his arrest in 2002, Washington declared an orange alert - the highest level - across the country.

Some other governments did much the same.

Faruq had disclosed that he had been directed by the top leadership of Al-Qaeda to plan large-scale attacks against US interests in Indonesia, Malaysia, Philippines and Singapore.

It is time now for Indonesia to take a long-term perspective on the issue, experts believe.

It should take measures to prevent groups from finding new recruits - at least 18 JI linked pesantrens or boarding schools continue to operate in Indonesia - and cripple the funding sources for the group.

“A large amount of funds came sometime in December from unknown sources in either the Middle-east or South Asia,” said author Ken Conboy, whose book The Second Front: Inside Asia’s Most Dangerous Terrorist Network has just been released.

“It was something like US$20,000. That’s a lot and more than enough to finance a few more bombings.” – The Straits Times/Asia News Network
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Afghanistan-Pak-India
U.S. Boosts Afghan Security After Escape
2005-11-02
More details coming to light
KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) - Security has been tightened at the U.S. military prison in Afghanistan following the escape of a suspected al-Qaida leader, a U.S. official said Wednesday. Indonesian anti-terrorism officials accused Washington of failing to tell them of the breakout.

Omar al-Farouq, born in Kuwait to Iraqi parents, was considered one of Osama bin Laden's top lieutenants in Southeast Asia until Indonesian authorities captured him in 2002 and turned him over to the United States. He was one of four suspected Arab terrorists to escape in July from the detention facility at Bagram, the main U.S. base in Afghanistan. It was not clear how long he had been held in Afghanistan.
Although the escape was widely reported at the time, al-Farouq was identified by an alias and the U.S. military only confirmed Tuesday that he was among those who fled.

A video the four men made of themselves after they escaped from Bagram was broadcast on Dubai-based television station Al-Arabiya on Oct. 18, the broadcaster said. In the video, the four men said they escaped on a Sunday when many of the Americans on the base were off duty, and one of the four - Muhammad Hassan, said to be Libyan - said he picked the locks of their cell, according to Al-Arabiya.

In the video, apparently shot in Afghanistan, they show fellow militants a map of the base and the location of their cell. Another shot in the video showed Hassan leading the others in prayer. Editors at Al-Arabiya would not say how they received the video.

An Indonesian anti-terrorism official, Maj. Gen. Ansyaad Mbai, on Wednesday sharply criticized the U.S. government for failing to inform him that al-Farouq was no longer behind bars. "We know nothing about the escape of Omar al-Farouq," he said. "He is a dangerous terrorist for us, his escape will increase the threat of terrorism in Indonesia.
"We need to coordinate security here as soon as possible to anticipate his return," he said. "The escape of al-Farouq could bring fresh wind to the operation of terrorism and could energize the new movement of terrorist actors in Southeast Asia and the world."

Attorney General Alberto Gonzales, asked by CNN about how the four escaped and Mbai's comments to The Associated Press that Indonesia was not told about it, said: "I don't know all the facts of this particular incident. Obviously, we consider this a very serious problem and one we'd have to look into the details of."

A top security consultant in Jakarta played down concerns that al-Farouq would make his way back to Southeast Asia and rejoin Jemaah Islamiyah, the regional terrorist group linked to al-Qaida. "He's Iraqi after all. If he's not hiding out (in Afghanistan or Pakistan), he's probably headed to Iraq to join the fight there," said Ken Conboy, who recently published a book on Jemaah Islamiyah.

Al-Farouq was recruited into al-Qaida in the early 1990s and went to the Khaldan training camp in Afghanistan from 1992 and 1995, Conboy wrote in his book "Intel." In 1995, he was sent to the Philippines, originally to enroll in a flight school so he could become proficient enough to commandeer a passenger plane on a suicide mission. He failed to gain entry and instead went to a camp in the traditional Muslim homeland of Mindanao, where he trained in jungle warfare tactics along with other Jemaah Islamiyah trainees, the book says.

From there, Al-Farouq traveled by sea to neighboring Indonesia, where in 2000 he set up training camps for radicals engaged in sectarian clashes with the nation's Christian minority. He was also reported to be planning a series of attacks on U.S. embassies and other Western interests throughout Southeast Asia, the book says. In 2002, al-Farouq was captured in a town south of Jakarta. Indonesian security officials turned him over to the United States and he was eventually transferred to Bagram.

Yuri Thamrin, Indonesia's Foreign Ministry spokesman, said he had heard nothing about al-Farouq's escape, but conceded that Washington may have directly informed security officials in Jakarta. "We have to check and make sure whether the U.S. has given the information to Indonesia or not," Thamrin said.

Military officials have declined to elaborate on how the men escaped from the heavily fortified jail, the only detainees they say have managed to do so. But a spokesman said Wednesday that an investigation into the breakout had turned up weaknesses in security and that these have been corrected. "Physical security upgrades include improvements to an external door and holding cells," Lt. Col. Jerry O'Hara said, reading from a statement.
Replaced that screen door, did you?
More than 500 suspected militants are held in the prison, a plain-looking building of about three stories in the heart of Bagram, next to the runways and the command center. Several razor-wire fences surround the base and areas outside the perimeter remain mined from Afghanistan's civil war and Soviet occupation. Military teams patrol constantly, and the main entrance is a series of heavily guarded checkpoints.

A U.S. military statement issued in August about the breakout said an inquiry had found that "the guards and supervisors did not follow standard operating procedures" on the night it occurred.
Would these be the same guards being prosecuted for "abusing" prisoners?
"These failures led to the escape of the four detainees on 10 July," it said, adding that "action has either been taken or is in the process of being taken" to fix the problems. The military conducted a massive manhunt after the breakout. U.S. troops, backed by Afghan police and soldiers, searched houses, manned roadblocks and zigzagged in helicopters across a dusty plain around the base.

Kabir Ahmed, the government leader in the area, said the American investigators had found where the men escaped from the base and fled through a field of wild grapevines. "The soldiers found the escapees' footprints still in the mud," he said. "It was an amazing breakout. How they did it exactly I still don't know."
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