Southeast Asia |
Too good to be true? Unpacking Jemaah Islamiyah’s self-declared disbanding |
2024-09-08 |
2024.07.10 [BenarNews] At an event organized last month by the Indonesian counter-terrorism agency (BNPT), Abu Rusydan and 15 other leaders of Jemaah Islamiyah announced their group’s dissolution. JI, the Southeast Asian affiliate of al-Qaeda, had carried out a string of devastating attacks in the 2000s, including Indonesia’s deadliest-ever terror attack — the 2002 Bali bombings. But now it was "ready to actively contribute to Indonesia’s progress and dignity," Abu Rusydan declared as he read from a prepared statement during the event on June 30. This is not the first time that a bully boy group has disbanded itself. The Provisional Irish Republican Army unilaterally broke up in 2005, throwing itself solely into legal activities through its political arm, Sinn Féin. In 2018, the Basque separatist organization ETA also unilaterally disbanded. But Jemaah Islamiyah’s announcement surprised many people, and left others feeling skeptical. There are three interrelated questions that need to be asked about the move by JI: How did we get here? Is this for real? And what does this mean for regional security? HOW DID WE GET HERE? Jemaah Islamiyah, which has its roots in the Darul Islam movement, was founded in Malaysia in 1993, when its two founders, Abdullah Sungkar and ![]() ... Leader of the Indonesian Mujahedeen Council and proprietor of the al-Mukmin madrassah in Ngruki. The spriritual head of Jemaah Islamiya, which he denies exists. Bashir was jugged and then released in the wake of the 2002 Bali bombings, which he blamed on a conspiracy among the U.S., Israel, and Australia. In 2014, as leader of Jemaah Ansharut Daulah (JAD), he pledged allegiance to ISIS. Currently in jug... , were on the run from Suharto’s New Order government in Indonesia. While in Malaysia, they served as a way-station for several hundred gunnies who traveled to Pakistain to join the anti-Soviet jihad in Afghanistan, putting them in direct contact with al-Qaeda. In 1996, a charter (the PUPJI) created the group’s organizational structure and codified JI’s Salafi ideology. At the time, the group also reached an agreement with the Philippine armed separatist organization, the Moro Islamic Liberation Front, to allow al-Qaeda to establish training camps in the southern Philippines. In Indonesia, JI perpetrated terrorist attacks on Christian churches and established two paramilitary organizations to wage sectarian conflict in the Maluku Islands and Central Sulawesi province. Following the U.S. invasion of Afghanistan in October 2001, the al-Qaeda leadership called for diversionary attacks. One of these was the twin Bali bombings that killed 202 people a year later. Between 2002 and 2007, JI perpetrated a major attack almost every year. But each attack left the organization weaker as counterterrorism forces became more adept and better resourced. This led to an ideological split in the organization between proponents of the line of targeting the "far enemy," versus those who wanted to foment sectarian conflict in order to rebuild their depleted ranks. The government legally banned JI in 2008, but allowed it to operate as an entity as long as it refrained from violence. In 2010, more than 100 JI members were swept up, including Abu Bakar Bashir, breaking the organization’s back. JI’s last terrorist act took place that year. Yet, from 2020-2023, Indonesian counter-terrorism efforts were as focused on JI as it was on the pro-Islamic State ![]() Allaharound with every other sentence, but to hear western pols talk they're not reallyMoslems.... umbrella group, Jamaah Ansharut Daulah (JAD). Security forces originally saw JI as an off-ramp for the more radical JAD, but attitudes hardened. In 2019, when counterterrorism police arrested JI’s emir, Para Wijayanto, they were shocked by the group’s size and national reach. Its madrassas and charitable arms had grown, while its corporations and publishing arms had created a steady revenue stream. As many JI members were arrested in 2021 and 2022 as JAD suspects. Indonesian counter-terrorism forces have applied a softer approach. Though seemingly campy, they’ve held mass rallies where former gunnies pledge allegiance to the republic. Former gunnies have established madrassas for the children of incarcerated bully boys, so they are not raised in JI or JAD-run schools, breaking terrorist social networks. They’ve gotten leaders, including the JAD Emir Aman Abdurrahman, who is on death row, and Umar Patek, to publicly renounce violence. Meanwhile the conflict in Poso, which served as a rallying point for all bully boy groups in Indonesia, has been stamped out. Internationally, there has been more cooperation amongst the regional security services. And while ungoverned space and institutional weakness remains in the southern Philippines, bully boy groups are no longer attracting JI and other foreign bully boys. The Moro Islamic Liberation Front continues to implement the grinding of the peace processor and build up institutions that will help the autonomous Moslem region transition to self-governance. There has been an unprecedented sustained attack on the Abu Sayyaf ...also known as al-Harakat al-Islamiyya, an Islamist terror group based in Jolo, Basilan and Zamboanga. Since its inception in the early 1990s, the group has carried out bombings, kidnappings, murders, head choppings, and extortion in their uniquely Islamic attempt to set up an independent Moslem province in the Philippines. Abu Sayyaf forces probably number less than 300 cadres. The group is closely allied with remnants of Indonesia's Jemaah Islamiya and has loose ties with MILF and MNLF who sometimes provide cannon fodder... , which is now fighting for survival. IS THIS FOR REAL? While JI has not been in a position to engage in terrorism, until now, it has never renounced violence. Many in the organization were simply waiting for the right circumstance to resume operations. It’s easy to be cynical about the group’s prepared statement, especially at an event stage-managed by the BNPT. Some of those who were on hand had been arrested and gone through government disengagement programs. To young radicals, they’re sell-outs, and past their prime. The average age of the men who renounced violence was in the late 50s or older. To what degree will younger members follow the leadership and pursue a legal-political alternative? In many ways, this is more promising. JI’s campaign of militancy failed to bring about the establishment of an Islamic State governed by Sharia. Democratic politics have advanced their political agenda more effectively. It’s not that Islamist parties do terribly well at the national level. Indeed, in Indonesia’s 2024 general election, they collectively represented about 20% of the electorate and won 101 of 580 seats. But they are important members of political coalitions, which tend to give them a disproportionate voice. It’s at the local level where we see faith-based parties make their mark, especially in the passage of public policy and Sharia compliant codes, which the majority of provinces and districts now have. Islamist parties are riddled with rivalries and have never formed a cohesive bloc. Perhaps for that reason, JI saw an opening for a tactical shift. In May 2021, JI established the Indonesian People’s Dakwah Party (PDRI). Yet, counter-terrorism forces arrested its founder, Farid Ahmad Okbah, that November for being a senior member of JI. Two others were arrested. The PDRI did not contest the 2024 elections. But it seems likely that with JI’s dissolution, the government will give former members more political space. WHAT DOES THIS MEAN FOR REGIONAL SECURITY? JI’s manpower and locus were largely-Indonesian based, but it remains a Southeast Asian organization. Some affiliates gravitated elsewhere. Darul Islam Sabah, for example, went from facilitating JI and the movement of foreign gunnies in and out of the southern Philippines to working with the JAD and other groups. There has always been more fluidity between Southeast Asian bully boy groups than those in the Middle East or South Asia. Abu Bakar Bashir defected from being pro-al Qaeda to being pro-Islamic State, with large numbers of acolytes, without consequence. As such, many younger gunnies who are committed to using violence to achieve their political aims are likely to defect to other groups. What those groups may be, though, is unclear. The JAD is decimated and leaderless, though to be fair, it was always far more horizontally structured. It has not executed a major terrorist attack since 2019. At present there is no apparent charismatic leader for bully boy Salafists ...Salafists are ostentatiously devout Moslems who figure the ostentation of their piety gives them the right to tell others how to do it and to kill those who don't listen to them... to coalesce around. And while one would expect external events, such as the war in Gazoo ...Hellhole adjunct to Israel and Egypt's Sinai Peninsula, inhabited by Gazooks. The place was acquired in the wake of the 1967 War and then presented to Paleostinian control in 2006 by Ariel Sharon, who had entered his dotage. It is currently ruled with an iron fist by Hamas with about the living conditions you'd expect. It periodically attacks the Hated Zionist Entity whenever Iran needs a ruckus created or the hard boyz get bored, getting thumped by the IDF in return. The ruling turbans then wave the bloody shirt and holler loudly about oppressionand disproportionate response... , to serve as a catalyst, to date it has not. JI still runs a network of madrassas, including some very large ones like al-Mukmin and Pesantren Hidayatullah in Balikpapan. These continue to be ideological incubators and hate factories. It’s hard to see state educational personnel intervene and change their curriculum. But Indonesian security forces have not let up, despite the decline in organizational strength or the tempo of operations. Terrorism will be a persistent but manageable threat in Indonesia. JI’s dissolution makes it more so, providing a legal-political alternative that is more moral, but also proven to be more effective. Zachary Abuza is a professor at the National War College in Washington and an adjunct at Georgetown University. The views expressed here are his own and do not reflect the position of the U.S. Department of Defense, the National War College, Georgetown University or BenarNews. Related: Jemaah Islamiyah: 2024-01-28 Philippine govt soldiers kill 8 suspected Islamic State-linked militants in Mindanao firefight Jemaah Islamiyah: 2024-01-28 Malaysian defendants in Bali bombings to serve about 5 more years Jemaah Islamiyah: 2024-01-07 Experts: Extremist groups spread disinformation online to provoke conflict during Indonesian election |
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Southeast Asia |
Experts: Extremist groups spread disinformation online to provoke conflict during Indonesian election |
2024-01-07 |
[Be arNews] Radical and bully boy groups in Indonesia have spread political disinformation online ahead of next month’s general election, with hoax content on the internet up nearly 80% last year compared with during the 2019 election, experts said. The intent isn’t to influence the election result, researchers said, but to provoke conflict in society and undermine the electoral process ahead of the nationwide polls set for Feb. 14 in Southeast Asia’s largest country. Hoaxes and fabricated stories about the election have been circulating on social media platforms like Facebook, X, and Instagram. While some are mere political mudslinging, others could have serious repercussions, observers said. Husen Asyhari, from LPTI Pelataran Mataram, a research institute in Yogyakarta, sees a clear attempt to deliberately mislead the electorate with false information. "There are efforts to influence voters through targeted disinformation, and some of it comes from terrorist groups with a historical anti-democratic stance," Husen told BenarNews. Among the groups Husen was referring to are Jemaah Islamiyah (JI), which was responsible for the 2002 Bali bombings, and the Islamic State ![]() Allaharound with every other sentence, but to hear western pols talk they're not reallyMoslems.... group-linked Jamaah Ansharut Daulah (JAD), members of which targeted three churches almost simultaneously in suicide kabooms in Surabaya in 2018. Both groups want Indonesia to be governed by Islamic law. In fact, in late October police said they had arrested 59 suspected faceless myrmidons from across the country belonging to JI and JAD as part of a pre-polls crackdown. Those arrested included the leader of a 40-member JAD team suspected of planning to disrupt the election, police said. The Indonesian Anti-Defamation Society (Mafindo), which provided the data on the increase in hoax content in 2023 versus 2019, researched how much and what kind of fake material was put online last year. Mafindo said it identified 2,178 pieces of hoax content from Jan. 1 to Dec. 22 last year, with 53% of that related to political disinformation. LGBT ISSUES A TARGET A fashionable subject in the West, so everyone else needs to address it as well, I guess. With the race for the presidency set to be among three candidates,Defense Minister Prabowo Subianto, former Central Java Gov. Ganjar Pranowo, and ex-Jakarta Gov. Anies Baswedan, who is popular among conservative Moslems, they have become targets, of course.Among the plethora of disinformation was a TikTok video that claimed without basis that Anies would establish a caliphate if he became president. According to Mafindo, some online hoax content has targeted Ganjar and his running mate, Mohammad Mahfud MD, over their alleged views on pornography and LGBTQI+ issues. One of the fabricated stories claimed that ruling party nominee Ganjar had admitted to watching pornography since he was a child. However, some people cause happiness wherever they go; others whenever they go... according to Mafindo, he had only said, "So what if I watch pornography?" without a word about his childhood. Another piece of fakery circulated on Facebook was a doctored photograph of Ganjar kissing a very young woman, with a post above the picture saying: "If this kind of person becomes the president, Indonesia will be destroyed." A false story attributed a statement to Mahfud MD that being LGBTQI+ was natural. Mafindo verified this was false and Mahfud MD denied making such a statement. Related: Jemaah Islamiyah: 2023-09-27 Malaysia seeking return of 2 Gitmo detainees: home minister Jemaah Islamiyah: 2023-04-25 Pre-trial hearings resume for SEAsian suspects held at Guantanamo Jemaah Islamiyah: 2023-03-01 From militancy to PhD: Brother of Bali bombers reaches academic peak Related: Jamaah Ansharut Daulah: 2022-12-08 Bali bombmaker paroled; suicide bomber kills 1 in attack on police station Jamaah Ansharut Daulah: 2022-05-20 Police: Arrested IS-linked militants sought to join MIT insurgents in Central Sulawesi Jamaah Ansharut Daulah: 2022-04-06 Indonesian militant chief on death row for terror attacks now condemns them |
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Southeast Asia |
Bali bombmaker paroled; suicide bomber kills 1 in attack on police station |
2022-12-08 |
[BenarNews] Indonesia on Wednesday released the Bali attacks bombmaker from prison at least seven years before he served out his full 20-year sentence. A justice ministry official confirmed that Umar Patek, who assembled the bombs used in the 2002 Bali Bombings — Indonesia’s worst ever terror attack — was freed on parole in the morning. On the same day, a former terrorism convict apparently unhappy with Indonesia’s new criminal code went kaboom!at a cop shoppe in Bandung, killing an officer and wounding 10 other people, officials said. The bomber had been released from prison last March after serving four years for a failed suicide kaboom in 2017 that was blamed on Jamaah Ansharut Daulah ![]() (JAD), an Islamic State ...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that they were al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're really very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allaharound with every other sentence, but to hear western pols talk they're not reallyMoslems.... -linked bully boy group, police said. Umar had been associated with another bully boy group, Jemaah Islamiyah, the Southeast Asian affiliate of the al-Qaeda international terror network. "Hisyam bin Alizein, alias Umar Patek, was released from the Surabaya Penitentiary under the parole program," said Rika Aprianti, spokesperson for the directorate general of corrections at the Law and Human Rights Ministry. Rika said Umar had fulfilled conditions for parole, including having served two-thirds of his sentence and taking part in deradicalization programs as well as pledging allegiance to the state. "The granting of parole was also recommended by the National Counter-Terrorism Agency (BNPT) and the Special Detachment 88 (Densus 88)," Rika said in a statement, referring to the police’s elite anti-terrorism unit. Umar has to now mandatorily join a "mentoring program" until April 2030, and his parole would be revoked if he violates it in any way, the statement said. Umar was arrested in Pakistain in 2011 and tried in Indonesia. In 2012, instead of receiving the death penalty ![]() In August, Umar said in an interview with the prison chief that it was a "mistake" to be involved in the Oct. 12, 2002 twin bombings in Bali that killed 202 people, including 88 Australians. Indonesian authorities blamed the attack on Jemaah Islamiyah. In 2008, Indonesian authorities executed Imam Samudra, Amrozi and Mukhlas for their roles in the bombings. Counterterrorism officials have touted Umar as a deradicalization success story, but the news in August that he would be paroled outraged people and officials in Australia. BOMBING KILLS POLICE OFFICER Meanwhile, ...back at the revival hall, the SWAT team had finally arrived... several people on social media expressed their unhappiness about Umar’s early release. "His release today at the same time as #BomBunuhDiri #Bandung [the suicide kaboom in Bandung] actually gives a negative signal to the public and will cheer up terrorist groups," @HastoSuprayogo said on Twitter. Police said the jacket wallah forced his way into the Astana Anyar cop shoppe in Bandung, the capital of West Java province, and set off the bomb while officers were conducting a morning roll-call. "He was stopped by several officers, but he brandished a knife and suddenly there was a kaboom," said provincial police chief Inspector General Suntana, who uses one name. Fingerprint and facial recognition results confirmed that the perpetrator was Agus Sujatno, national police chief General Listyo Sigit Prabowo told news hounds. The 34-year-old bomber had not been successfully deradicalized, Listyo said. Photos circulating online showed the bomber’s body parts strewn on the ground. An officer identified as Sofyan died in a hospital of his injuries. Police seized a cycle of violence they said belonged to the bomber. The vehicle had an Islamic State logo and a piece of paper taped to the front of the vehicle that read "The Criminal Code, the law of polytheists/infidels. Wage war against Satanic law enforcers." The attack came a day after the Indonesian parliament passed a broad new criminal code that, critics fear, would threaten civil liberties. Listyo said police also found pieces of paper at the scene scribbled with criticisms of the criminal code. The national police have ordered stations across the country to tighten security and increase vigilance, front man Brigadier Gen. Ahmad Ramadhan said. ’WE CAN’T READ THEIR MINDS’ Nasir Abbas, a former bully boy who has worked with counter-terrorism police, said the attack was a sign that that JAD could still carry out attacks. "This shows that the movement (JAD) still exists and is capable of getting people to carry out suicide kabooms. That’s the message," Nasir told BenarNews. Nasir said the bomber’s supposed objection to the new criminal code was not surprising because JAD Death Eaters had always rejected Indonesian secular laws in favor of sharia. Imron Rasyid, a security analyst at the Habibie Center think-tank, said the attack was timed with the controversy over the criminal code. "They are taking advantage of the moment [to increase the impact of their action]," Imron told BenarNews. Imron warned that JAD remained a major threat because the group had been recruiting while authorities were preoccupied with the COVID-19 pandemic. Boy Rafli Amar, the head of the National Counter-terrorism Agency (BNPT), rejected suggestions that security authorities were caught off guard. "Terrorists always look for opportunities to strike. We can’t read their minds," Boy said. Indonesian authorities have blamed JAD for a series of attacks in Indonesia over the past six years. These include gun and kabooms near a shopping center and a coffee shop in Central Jakarta in 2016, the first terror strike claimed by the Islamic State in Southeast Asia. The attack killed eight people including four bully boys. JAD was also involved in suicide kabooms in 2018 in Surabaya, Indonesia’s second largest city, authorities said. Twenty-seven people died, including 13 suspects. Related: Umar Patek: 2022-10-11 Ahead of 20th anniversary, Bali bombing survivors remember life-changing event Umar Patek: 2022-08-30 Bali bomb maker claims involvement in 2002 attack a ‘mistake’ Umar Patek: 2022-08-22 Anger in Australia as Sentence Cut Means Jihadist Bali Bomber Could Be Free in Days |
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Southeast Asia |
Repentant former Islamic militant works to draw youth away from radicalism |
2022-08-31 |
[BenarNews] At 36, Supriyadi has twice been in prison for terror-related activities in Poso, a regency in Indonesia’s Central Sulawesi province once torn by Moslem-Christian violence. Now, the repentant co-founder of the Eastern Indonesia Mujahideen (MIT) murderous Moslem organization wants to dedicate his life to drawing people away from extremism because, he says, he still has a conscience and opposes the killing of civilians. Authorities have said that MIT members were responsible for several killings, not only of coppers, but of civilians they suspected were police informants, in Poso and its surroundings since 2012. In May 2021, MIT killed four farmers in Central Sulawesi, and six months earlier, they killed four villagers living in a Christian community in Sigi regency near Poso. Similarly, in 2015, MIT suspects beheaded at least three non-Moslem farmers in Parigi Moutong regency. These killings troubled Supriyadi (alias Upik Pagar). "I still have a conscience. I don’t want to kill people carelessly. I disagree with MIT’s [killing of civilians.] That’s why I don’t want to deal with them anymore," he told BenarNews. "Killing farmers, it is very wrong and not in line with the jihad struggle that I believe in." Supriyadi was a member of the al Qaeda-affiliated Jemaah Islamiyah, the group behind the 2002 Bali bombings, when he was first arrested in 2007 for illegal possession of firearms. After his release in December 2009, he returned to Poso and sought out friends from his former terror organization to form JI’s splinter group, the Poso-based Jamaah Anshorut Tauhid (JAT), the following year. "You could say I’m one of the founders of Poso-based JAT," he said, adding that JAT later became MIT with a new man running it. Like its predecessor, MIT, too, aimed to establish an Islamic caliphate. But, before the group could could carry out any attacks, Supriyadi was again arrested by the anti-terror squad in 2011. "I was also charged with engaging in military training. I was sentenced to four years in prison," he said. Even though he tried to stay away from MIT after his release in 2015, Supriyadi was contacted by the murderous Moslem group several times. "They knew when I was free, that’s why they kept contacting me through their people," Supriyadi said. He still refused to engage with them, because he was determined not to return to the path of violence, he said. Since then he has been working on his small business of raising chickens for eggs and with efforts to promote peace and spread the message to the youth to move away from radicalism. "Thank God, my life is getting better. The profit from business is sufficient for living expenses with the family. All three of my children have also gone to school," he said. Supriyadi has since worked with an ex-terrorist on a film, "Courier," that tells the true story of a cocoa farmer who was forced to become a courier for an Islamic murderous Moslem group so he could keep working his fields without fear of attack. "For my brothers who are still with the [MIT] group, wherever you are, repent, remember your wives and children at home," he said. The former murderous Moslem said he wanted his former enemy, the government, to pay more attention to repentant ex-convicts. "The regional government in Poso knows that we are no longer active in radical groups and terrorism. But they don’t pay attention to us, except for the BNPT [National Counterterrorism Agency] and NGOs," Supriyadi said. He said he is ready to work with the government to campaign against radicalism so that the younger generation in Indonesia, especially Poso, doesn’t get involved in the activities of radical groups. "Because I used to be a perpetrator, of course I know how to prevent these young people from trusting and wanting to join krazed killer groups," he said. "To the government: ’If you want to take me, I’m always ready.’" Related: Eastern Indonesia Mujahideen: 2022-05-20 Police: Arrested IS-linked militants sought to join MIT insurgents in Central Sulawesi Eastern Indonesia Mujahideen: 2022-04-06 Indonesia’s manhunt for MIT holdouts drags on Eastern Indonesia Mujahideen: 2022-01-05 Indonesian Forces Gun Down Suspected Pro-IS Militant in Central Sulawesi Mountains Related: Jemaah Islamiyah: 2022-08-23 Guantanamo court sets pre-trial hearing for suspects in Bali bombings Jemaah Islamiyah: 2022-08-22 Anger in Australia as Sentence Cut Means Jihadist Bali Bomber Could Be Free in Days Jemaah Islamiyah: 2022-03-12 Indonesian Police Say Use of Force Justified in Doctor’s Death |
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Southeast Asia |
Police: Arrested IS-linked militants sought to join MIT insurgents in Central Sulawesi |
2022-05-20 |
[BenarNews] Many of the 24 suspects arrested in Central Sulawesi with alleged links to a pro-Islamic State ...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that they were al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're really very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allaharound with every other sentence, but to hear western pols talk they're not reallyMoslems.... holy warrior group wanted to join another hard boy outfit whose decimated membership has dwindled to two, Indonesian police said Wednesday without disclosing details. The suspects are members of Jamaah Ansharut Daulah ![]() (JAD), a domestic holy warrior network affiliated with IS, said Sr. Commissioner Arif Budiman, the head of an operation tasked with hunting down the last remaining holdouts from the Eastern Indonesia Mujahideen (MIT) group in the mountains and jungles of Central Sulawesi province. "All of them are members of JAD. Various pieces of evidence were seized," Arif told BenarNews, adding that the arrests were a "pre-emptive" move to stop them from joining the two MIT runaways and carry out acts of terrorism. Arif said the 24 suspects were being held in Poso, a regency in Central Sulawesi where MIT holy warriors, who are accused of carrying out beheadings and bombings, have been most active. MIT is one of two pro-IS groups operating in Indonesia, the world’s most populous Moslem-majority country. The other is JAD, which Indonesian authorities have blamed for most terror attacks in the archipelago nation during the past six years. Earlier this week, national police front man Ahmad Ramadhan said that some of the two dozen suspects had pledged allegiance to the overall IS leader, Abu Hassan al-Hashimi al-Qurayshi, through the WhatsApp messaging service. al-Qurayshi died during a counter-terrorism raid by U.S. special forces in Syria this past February. Some of the suspects had sought to deliver food and other supplies to the MIT Lions of Islam on the run or had withheld information about them, according to Ramadhan. Police seized eight rifles, silencers, a revolver, and hundreds of bullets from the suspects, he said. On Wednesday, police also said they had had arrested two more JAD holy warrior suspects, bringing to 26 the number of people who have been nabbed since Saturday. "Both are Poso residents and supporters who wanted to join MIT," Provincial police front man Didik Supranoto told BenarNews, without providing details on accusations against them. Authorities believe that MIT’s strength has been reduced to two people after security forces killed Suhardin (also known as Hasan Pranata) during a shootout in Parigi Moutong regency last month. On Sept. 18, 2021, police and military members of the Madago Raya task force shot full of holes Ali Kalora, MIT’s top commander at the time, and a follower identified as Jaka Ramadhan in the jungles of Parigi Moutong. In January 2016, the government launched Operation Tinombala, a joint military-police task force, with a mission to capture or kill MIT holy warriors. The name changed to Madago Raya (Kindness), as part of a strategy that focused on humanitarian and social activities, police said. ‘EXCESSIVE’ Meanwhile, ...back at the shootout, Butch clutched at his other leg...... a member of the Central Sulawesi legislative council, Muhaimin Yunus Hadi, called the arrests "excessive" and said they involved the destruction of several residential homes in Poso and Tojo Unauna regency. "Ten residents complained to me that their family members who were arrested were treated badly by the Densus," Muhaimin told BenarNews in Palu, referring to the anti-terror police unit. He said relatives of the suspects had been left in the dark about their loved ones’ status. "From the reports I have received, those arrested were mostly youths, some of them teenagers," he said, adding that those arrested included ordinary residents and construction workers. Andi Akbar, a member of the Central Sulawesi Moslem Legal Team, which provides legal representation for suspected holy warriors, said he received information that officers had acted unlawfully, including intimidating residents. "Densus even destroyed several residents’ houses. We are still collecting reports from residents in Poso and Tojo Unauna," he told BenarNews. Akbar said a mother had not received news about the whereabouts of her son. "Maybe her child was one of those arrested," he said. "If that’s the case, Densus should provide information to the family so they don’t panic." |
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Southeast Asia |
Indonesian militant chief on death row for terror attacks now condemns them |
2022-04-06 |
[BenarNews] An Indonesian krazed killer leader on death row for his role in Islamic State ...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that they were al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're really very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allaharound with every other sentence, but to hear western pols talk they're not reallyMoslems.... -inspired terrorism acts said in a video that he opposed terror attacks linked to his group in 2016-2018, and chided followers for using women and kiddies in some of them. In a video posted on YouTube on March 31, Aman Abdurrahman, the chief ideologue for the Jamaah Ansharut Daulah |
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Southeast Asia |
Indonesia: Tip By Terror Convict Leads Police to Explosive Stash |
2021-10-16 |
[BenarNews] Information obtained from a convicted pro-Islamic State ...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that they were al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're really very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allaharound with every other sentence, but to hear western pols talk they're not reallyMoslems.... bully boy led to the seizure of 35 kilos of home-made explosives at the foot of a mountain in West Java province earlier this month, Indonesian police said Wednesday. Prisoner Imam Mulyana, a member of Jamaah Ansharut Daulah ![]() (JAD), an Indonesian bully boy network affiliated with the so-called Islamic State (IS) group, was arrested in 2017 in Cirebon, a city in West Java, for a failed attempt ... Curses! Foiled again!... to attack an entourage of President Joko "Jokowi" Widodo. "Imam made an astonishing confession that he and his group had kept 35 kilograms of TATP," said Aswin Siregar, a top officer with Densus 88, Indonesia’s elite anti-terrorism police unit. Imam guided the police to Mount Ciremai near Cirebon to find the stash of triacetone triperoxide (TATP), a powerful home-made explosive known to Lions of Islam as the Mother of Satan, Aswin told BenarNews. TATP, which is highly unstable, has been used in several terrorist attacks in recent years. These include the 2005 London Underground bombing, terror attacks in Gay Paree in 2015, attacks on the Brussels metro and airport in 2016, and a bombing the next year at an Ariana Grande concert in Manchester, England, according to New America, a Washington think-tank. "Thanks to our de-radicalization efforts, Imam Mulyana asked us on October 1 to secure the dangerous material," said Aswin, who heads the operational support at Densus 88, which also runs a program to reform Lions of Islam and reintegrate them into society. Imam traveled with the police to the mountain hideout the same day. Aswin said that a police bomb-squad disposed of the stash of TATP in the mountain as soon as the authorities found it. Only 50 grams of the materiel was enough to create a one-meter-wide and 20-centimeter-deep hole when detonated in a controlled explosion, Aswin said, adding the blasts from disposing of the explosive caused severe vibrations, holes in the ground, and landslides. Imam, 31, "was fully aware that the terrorist act they had planned was a crime against humanity and a betrayal of his religion," Aswin said. Stanislaus Riyanta, a security researcher at the University of Indonesia, praised the police for their work. "This is proof that [the bully boys] had a big plan. This finding should prompt the police to look for more explosive stashes," Stanislaus told BenarNews. Related: West Java province: 2021-03-29 Huge refinery blew up in West Java. West Java province: 2020-08-16 Indonesian Police Catch ISIS-linked JAD Number 3, 14 Other Suspected Militants West Java province: 2016-12-15 Arrested Indonesian woman says IS group militant ordered bombing Related: Jamaah Ansharut Daulah: 2021-08-21 Indonesia police have arrested 53 militants suspected of planning an attack on independence day Jamaah Ansharut Daulah: 2021-08-17 Indonesian Police Catch 48 Suspected Islamic Militants in Nationwide Dragnet Jamaah Ansharut Daulah: 2021-07-05 Indonesian Police Fly Dozens of Suspected JAD Militants to Jakarta |
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Southeast Asia | |
Indonesia police have arrested 53 militants suspected of planning an attack on independence day | |
2021-08-21 | |
[PUBLISH.TWITTER]
Some of those arrested were from the group Jemaah Islamiah (JI), a jihadist network with ties to al Qaeda, or the Islamic State ![]() Allaharound with every other sentence, but to hear western pols talk they're not reallyMoslems.... -inspired Jamaah Ansharut Daulah (JAD), blamed for a church bombing on Sulawesi island in March, police said. Argo Yuwono, a national police spokesperson, told news hounds the arrests had taken place across 11 provinces in the week leading up to Indonesian independence day on Tuesday. "They went after people from the government," he said, without specifying which people. "They wanted to use the momentum of the independence day." Argo said police had seized weapons, ammunition, and donation boxes used to raise funds. A resurgence in attacks has been linked to the hundreds of Indonesians that went to Syria and Iraq to fight for the Islamic State before returning. More than 120 bully boyz have been arrested this year, said an official at the country’s counter-terrorism unit on Friday.
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Southeast Asia |
Indonesian Police Catch 48 Suspected Islamic Militants in Nationwide Dragnet |
2021-08-17 |
[BenarNews] Indonesian police said Monday they had arrested 48 suspected Islamic The arrests of 45 suspected Jemaah Islamiyah ![]() ...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that they were al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're really very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allaharound with every other sentence, but to hear western pols talk they're not reallyMoslems.... |
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Southeast Asia |
Indonesian Police Fly Dozens of Suspected JAD Militants to Jakarta |
2021-07-05 |
[BenarNews] Authorities in Indonesia flew dozens of suspected forces of Evil to Jakarta for questioning and detention, including members of a Makassar cell linked to a church bombing on Palm Sunday, officials said Friday. The alleged members of the Jamaah Ansharut Daulah ...founded by our old friend Abu Bakar Bashir of Al Qaeda-linked Jemaah Islamiyah fame, JAD translates cleverly as Partisans of the Islamic State ...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that they were al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're really very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allaharound with every other sentence, but to hear western pols talk they're not reallyMoslems.... |
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Southeast Asia | |
Islamic State-linked Suspects Arrested in Indonesia’s Papua Region Allegedly Targeted Bishop | |
2021-06-03 | |
[BenarNews] Twelve suspected Islamic snuffies taken into custody in a southern district of Indonesia’s troubled Papua region had planned to attack a local archbishop and cop shoppes there, authorities said Tuesday. The suspects arrested in Papua’s Merauke regency on Friday and Sunday were linked to a cell of Jamaah Ansharut Daulah,
![]() Allaharound with every other sentence, but to hear western pols talk they're not reallyMoslems.... | |
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Southeast Asia |
Day 3: Newlywed Couple Launched Suicide Attack at Indonesian Church, Police Say |
2021-03-30 |
[BenarNews] The two suspects who carried out a suicide kaboom in Indonesia’s South Sulawesi province on Palm Sunday were a newlywed couple and part of a local krazed killer cell linked to another couple who blew themselves up at a Philippine cathedral in January 2019, police said Monday. Islamic Romance™ Police said that Jamaah Ansharut Daulah (JAD), ...founded by our old friend Abu Bakar Bashir of Al Qaeda-linked Jemaah Islamiyah fame, JAD translates cleverly as Partisans of the Islamic State, but really only means ISIS in Indonesia... a pro-Islamic State![]() Allaharound with every other sentence, but to hear western pols talk they're not reallyMoslems.... |
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