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Southeast Asia
Bomb outside church injures two in Mindanao
2018-05-02
[UCA News] A bomb blast shook a Catholic church in the southern Philippines on April 29, a day after Southeast Asian leaders were warned of a real threat of terror attacks in the region. Philippine officials blamed the Bangsamoro Islamic Freedom Fighters, which have claimed allegiance to the Islamic State, for the blast that wounded two people in the city of Koronadal.

Another bomb was later found outside a convenience store in the city, three blocks from the St. Anthony Parish cathedral where the first blast occurred. Central Mindanao police chief Marcelo Morales said, "This is a diversionary tactic [of the terrorists] because of a series of arrests we made and military operations against lawless groups."

The blast happened after Sunday Masses while baptism ceremonies were taking place inside the church. Police sources said the bomb "bore the signature of an Islamic extremist group."

The day before, Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong of Singapore warned Southeast Asian leaders that the region is facing "very real" threats from terror and cyber-attacks. Lee said, "We need to be resilient to both conventional threats, and also non-conventional threats such as terrorism and cyberattacks."

Indonesian terrorism expert, Ansyaad Mbai, said the threat of cyber-attacks is a reality in Indonesia with a network known as Saracen allegedly behind the spread of hate speech. Mbai, former head Indonesia's National Counterterrorism Agency, said the group intends to sow division ahead of upcoming elections.
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Southeast Asia
Jokowi Under Pressure to Revamp Terror Laws After Jakarta Attack
2016-01-18
[BLOOMBERG] The first Islamic State
...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allah around with every other sentence, but to hear the pols talk they're not really Moslems....
-linked attack on the world's most populous Muslim nation puts more pressure on Indonesian President Joko Widodo to give the military a bigger role and add legal heft to anti-terrorism efforts.

Unlike some countries facing threats from Islamic State, authorities in Indonesia lack laws to arrest returnees from Syria and Iraq. Giving security forces greater leeway to lock up Islamists is a sensitive issue in the Southeast Asian nation, which until 1998 was a military dictatorship.

Last week's attack on central Jakarta which killed four civilians was relatively unsophisticated. But it brought home to Indonesia -- and the region more broadly -- the risks of Asians going to fight in the Middle East and then returning skilled and more radicalized. While Widodo, better known as Jokowi, has urged countries to "wage war" against terrorism, he has not moved to bolster laws to tackle the threat.

"All that is needed is political support, but that is difficult in Indonesia," said Ansyaad Mbai, a former head of the country's anti-terror agency. "At the highest level people are afraid of being accused of being anti-Islam."

Revoking Citizenship
On Friday, Police-General Badrodin Haiti said he wanted to be able to revoke the citizenship of Indonesians fighting with IS abroad. National intelligence agency chief Sutiyoso said laws were not sufficient to arrest and track bully boys. He said Malaysian authorities can attach electronic tracking devices to suspects, while the U.S. and La Belle France were able to strike a balance between human rights
...which often include carefully measured allowances of freedom at the convenience of the state...
and the need for firm action.

"Those countries respect human rights and freedom," he told news hounds. "But when national security is threatened by terrorism, they can prioritize the intelligence process."

The police chief on Saturday called for anti-terrorism laws to be strengthened to allow preventative detention. "We can detect a terrorist network but we can't act before they have committed a crime," he said. "That is the weakness of our laws."
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Southeast Asia
Indonesia suspects new terrorist links to al Qaeda
2012-11-02
A group of 11 suspected terrorists arrested in Indonesia in the past week for allegedly planning to attack the U.S. Embassy and other American targets is likely connected to remnants of Jemaah Islamiyah, according to Indonesia's counterterrorism head.

Ansyaad Mbai said interrogation of the group would probably show they are linked with Jemaah Islamiyah, which was al Qaeda's chief franchise in Southeast Asia and the group that carried out the Bali bombings 10 years ago. He said the group "looked new at first, but we've found that they're connected to the previous terrorist networks."

The arrests came as government forces stepped up operations on the northern island of Sulawesi. Police on Wednesday killed one suspect and arrested two others in a shootout in the Sulawesi town of Poso.

Mbai said Poso is the new front in Indonesia's fight against Islamism. Officials say militants are fomenting sectarian unrest between Muslims and Christians in Poso to destabilize the country and advance their ultimate goal of creating an Islamic nation.

Mbai said, "The center of gravity for terrorism in Indonesia is Solo [in Central Java], but Poso is used as the training grounds now. The situation is already critical. People are scared."

He said it was possible that some of the men apprehended during the past week in the plot against the U.S. Embassy in Jakarta received training in Poso. The 11 suspects were all arrested in cities on Java: Bogor, Solo and Madiun.

Indonesian police said the suspects were planning attacks on the embassy, the U.S. Consulate in Surabaya and an office of the Indonesian arm of a U.S. mining company.

Indonesian police identified the suspects as being from a little-known group called Haraqah Sunni for Indonesian Society, or Hasmi. The group targeted American interests in part for revenge following the anti-Islam video clip, that triggered protests around the Muslim world.

Amar said, "From the investigation so far, we know that one of the reasons why they will launch the act of terrorism is this movie, which they view is a blasphemy against Islam.

President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, in a speech on Tuesday, called on Indonesia's citizens to fight terrorism but added that the rest of the world needs to be careful about angering extremist elements. He said, "I am also calling on to the world, to countries to uphold mutual respect and be sensitive to [values] in other communities, in other nations, in other religions. Stop blasphemies."

Southeast Asia's terror situation is not confined to Indonesia. Lebanese officials last week arrested two Malaysians in Beirut on suspicion of having links with al Qaeda. Marwan Sinno, the lawyer representing the two Malaysians, said they had been accused of working for al Qaeda and planning a terrorist act in Syria.
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Southeast Asia
Bashir still giving orders from jail cell
2012-10-11
The radical cleric Abu Bakar Bashir, founder of the group behind the 2002 Bali bombings, is believed to still be giving orders to would-be terrorists from his jail cell.

Bashir was transferred from police headquarters in Jakarta last week to Batu Penitentiary on the island of Nusa Kambangan, dubbed the Alcatraz of Indonesia because of its extremely high level of security.

The prison island, off the southern coast of Central Java, was also where Bali bombers Amrozi, Imam Samudra and Mukhlas were housed until their executions in 2008.

While police did not initially disclose the reasons behind the sudden decision to move Bashir, which came days ahead of the 10th anniversary of the Bali bombings, it has emerged authorities are concerned that he has continued to be actively involved with terrorist groups even from behind bars.
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"The leading figure (for terrorism) is still the same," Indonesia's counter-terrorism agency chief Ansyaad Mbai has told AAP.

"Even though he's already in jail, he's still giving commands."

The 74-year-old founded Jemaah Islamiah (JI), the group responsible for the attacks in Bali, and remains the spiritual leader for Jamaah Anshorut Tauhid (JAT), which was designated a terror organisation by the United States earlier this year.

Mbai has also warned that the new crop of violent jihadists now active in Indonesia is being driven by the same radical ideology that led to the 2002 bombings.

"It's no longer important what their name is. What's obvious is the new group and JI are linked ideologically," he said.

"Their ideological figures remain the same."

Bashir, who spent 26 months in prison over the Bali bombings before later being acquitted, was jailed again last year for helping set up a terrorist training camp in Aceh.

He was sentenced to 15 years after being found guilty of using JAT as a front to raise funds for the Aceh camp. The terror cell found training at the remote jungle base was believed to be planning attacks on Western targets.

The counter-terrorism chief also confirmed that a group of five men shot dead in Bali in March were part of a new military wing formed by JAT.

"JAT has several wings. The military wing is called Tim Hisbah," Mbai said.

"This group is also linked with the five people shot in Bali."

Terrorism analyst Noor Huda Ismail said more effort was needed to counter the radical ideology still flourishing in Indonesia, warning that failure to address the problem would almost certainly lead to a repeat of the attacks in Bali.

He said extremist elements in Indonesia were still regrouping after a successful campaign by authorities over the past 10 years.

"We arrested 600, we killed some of them," he told AAP.

"But eventually, those people will be released."

"What do we do with them? Can we hope that they will de-radicalise voluntarily? There needs to be a systematic effort."
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Southeast Asia
Police: Terrorism behind shootings in Solo
2012-09-02
[Kabar] The National Police and the National Counterterrorism Agency (BNPT) said Wednesday (August 29th) that attacks on police posts in Surakarta (Solo), Central Java, were aimed at spreading terror, local media reported.

National Police front man Boy Rafli Amar told The Jakarta Post that police identified several groups involved in the shooting and grenade-throwing incidents at police posts last week.

Another attack Thursday night left one officer maimed, according to Kompas.

"Some group members are being interrogated, while others are on our radar. We have yet to identify details of the groups, such as whether or not they are locals. However,
if you can't be a good example, then you'll just have to be a horrible warning...
so far we believe that the attacks were meant as terrorism," Boy Rafli said, according to The Post.

His comments came amid speculation that the violence was political in nature, and supposedly aimed at undermining Solo Mayor Joko "Jokowi" Widodo, who is running for governor of Jakarta. Officials are denying such a link.

Separately, BNPT Chairman Ansyaad Mbai said "It's ridiculous to relate the attacks to the upcoming Jakarta gubernatorial election. Our findings show that these events are most likely intended to terrorise."
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Southeast Asia
Inside the making of the Bali bombs
2012-02-12
Long look at the bomb-builder of the Bali terrorist attack. Worth noting the connections to Abbottabad and his proximity to bin Laden for a time.
JAKARTA, Indonesia: An Indonesian militant charged in the 2002 Bali terrorist attacks told interrogators he spent weeks holed up in a rented house, painstakingly building a half-ton bomb using household items including a rice ladle, a grocer's scale and plastic bags.

A transcript of the Umar Patek's interrogation obtained by The Associated Press offers extraordinary detail of the Bali plot just days before Patek -- a radical once Southeast Asia's most-wanted bomb-making suspect -- goes on trial in Jakarta for his alleged role in the nightclub attack that killed 202 people.

Patek, known as "Demolition Man" for his expertise with explosives, says he and other conspirators stashed the 1,540-pound (700-kilogram) bomb in four filing cabinets, loaded them in a Mitsubishi L300 van along with a TNT vest bomb. The van was detonated outside two nightclubs on Bali's famous Kuta beach on Oct. 12, 2002. Most of those killed were foreign tourists.

Although homemade bombs are easily assembled by militants all over the world, making such powerful devices as those used in Bali -- and using such unsophisticated equipment -- would have taken enormous amount of care and expertise.

Patek, 45, goes on trial Monday following a nine-year flight from justice that took him from Indonesia to the Philippines to Pakistan, reportedly in pursuit of more terrorism opportunities. He was finally caught in January 2011 in the same Pakistani town where US Navy Seals would kill Osama Bin Laden just a few months later.
Boy howdy, what a coincidence. Wonder if he and Binny shared the community pool?
Patek was hiding out in a second-floor room of a house in Abbottabad, a $1 million bounty on his head, when Pakistani security forces, acting on a tip from the CIA, burst in. After a firefight that left Patek wounded, he was captured and extradited to Indonesia.
Should have been extradited to Diego Garcia...
His capture was seen as a yardstick of the successes that Asian security forces, with US help, have achieved against Jemaah Islamiyah, the Al-Qaeda-linked regional terror group blamed for the Bali bombings and several other attacks in Indonesia. All its other leaders have been executed, killed by security forces, or are on death row.

Patek is charged with premeditated murder, hiding information about terrorism, illegal possession of explosives and conspiracy to commit terrorism, and now faces a possible death sentence as well. The indictment also accuses Patek of providing explosives for a string of Christmas Eve attacks on churches in 2000 that claimed 19 lives.

Interviews with intelligence officials in Indonesia and the Philippines, the interrogation report and other documents obtained by the AP reveal the peripatetic life Patek led after the Bali attacks as he ranged widely and freely, often without passing through immigration checks, while allegedly passing along his bomb-making skills to other terrorists.

Patek, whose real name is Hisyam bin Alizein, is the son of a goat meat trader. He went to computer school and learned English before being recruited into Jemaah Islamiyah by Dulmatin, a fellow militant who was gunned down by Indonesian police in March 2010.

After his arrest, Patek told his interrogators that he learned to make bombs during a 1991-1994 stint at a militant academy in Pakistan's Sadda province, and later in Turkhom, Afghanistan, where bomb-making courses ranged "from basic to very difficult."

He said he was living in Solo, Indonesia, when mastermind Imam Samudra approached him to make a bomb in Bali. He agreed and flew to Denpasar, Bali's capital, and was taken to a rented house.

"In one room of the house, I began to mix the explosive ingredients, which were already in the rental house," he said. "For about three weeks, I made the explosive ingredients into black powder with the assistance of Sawad (a co-conspirator). For tools used in the mixing of the ingredients, I used (a) scale that will usually be used in a food store, rice ladle and plastic bags as containers."

Dulmatin separately worked on the electronic circuits, which were later attached as detonators to the bombs packed into the filing cabinets.

"When we were lifting the filing cabinets into the white L300 van, an explosion occurred which was caused by friction of the filing cabinet with the floor of the room, because the floor still had some leftover black powder on it," he said.

Patek left Bali a few days before the attacks were carried out.

Afterward, officials said, Patek and Dulmatin went to the Philippines and allegedly joined forces with the local extremist group Abu Sayyaf, spending the next several years training militants and plotting attacks, including against US troops in the Philippines.

Meanwhile, Imam Samudra and two other masterminds of the Bali attacks -- brothers Amrozi Nurhasyim and Ali Ghufron -- were caught, tried and executed.

Patek returned to Indonesia in June 2009, living in various rented houses in Jakarta. He held several meetings with radicals and aspiring militants at home and held assault rifle and bomb-making training sessions at a beach in Banten near Jakarta.

But Patek's heart was set on going to Afghanistan to fight alongside the Taleban or other extremist groups, said Ansyaad Mbai, Indonesia's anti-terrorism chief. He told the AP that Patek intended to continue his fight in a more defined battleground with a larger radical group, and refused Dulmatin's offer to become an instructor in a new militant camp in Indonesia's Aceh province.

"He wanted to fight with a larger extremist group, and Afghanistan was the ideal battleground for him," Mbai said.

But to reach Afghanistan, he would have to go to Pakistan first. A police investigator said that a 37-year-old Pakistani in Indonesia, Nadeem Akhtar, helped Patek get a Pakistani visa from his embassy in Jakarta.
Why not just print up a fresh one?
After Patek arrived in Lahore, a courier with links to Al-Qaeda then brought him to Abbottabad, possibly to meet with Bin Laden.

Mbai did not rule out the possibility that Patek went to Abbottabad to not only gain a foothold into Afghanistan but also to obtain funds for setting up a militant training camp in Jolo in southern Philippines. But before he could make much progress or meet Bin Laden, he was caught.

Patek's trial not only seeks justice for the Bali bombings, but also is a coup for intelligence officials. He is believed to have valuable information about Al-Qaeda and its links with Jemaah Islamiyah, which was founded by Indonesian exiles in Malaysia in the early 1990s.

The Bali bombing remains JI's most spectacular attack. Though there have been several others since, but none as deadly. Analysts credit a crackdown that has netted more than 700 militants since 2000, including the death of several key leaders in police action.
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Southeast Asia
Indonesia passes on trial of Bali bomber
2011-07-05
INDONESIA wants Australia or another country to extradite and prosecute one of the masterminds behind the 2002 Bali bombings, Umar Patek, because it fears a trial in Jakarta would increase terrorist risks.

In an exclusive interview with the Herald, the head of Indonesia's anti-terrorism agency Ansyaad Mbai said Mr Patek would become a new figurehead for violent jihadis if returned to the country of his birth.
Unfortunately, he knows his countrymen...
His comments highlight the rift among countries about what to do with Mr Patek, who was arrested this year in Abbottabad, Pakistan, the same place as the leader of al-Qaeda, Osama bin Laden, was killed. Mr Patek had eluded authorities for almost a decade after fleeing Indonesia after the bombings, which killed 202 people.

''Umar Patek was chased by many countries. There was a [million]-dollar prize on his head but now that he's arrested it's as if Indonesia must face the problem alone,'' Mr Ansyaad said.

''This man is very dangerous. His presence here would increase the terror threat, not only to Indonesia but to several countries with a presence here. He'll be like fresh air for remnants of the terrorism network. [The terrorists] are dangerous, they still exist and they've been waiting for a figurehead such as Umar Patek.''

Mr Ansyaad said Indonesia would face difficulties bringing Mr Patek to justice, noting that the bombings occurred before Indonesia enacted its counter-terrorism laws.
Well, you're not going to let him go. The previous law didn't account for murderous terrorists, and you don't want to apply the new law ex-post facto.

Now do you understand why we have Guantanamo?
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Southeast Asia
Terror group behind Indonesia book bombs
2011-03-17
[Straits Times] A TOP Indonesian anti-terror official said on Wednesday that regional krazed killer group Jemaah Islamiyah was behind a series of 'book bombs' in the capital, one of which injured four people.

The first bomb, hidden in a hollowed-out thick book, went kaboom! on Tuesday afternoon as police attempted to defuse it.

The package was addressed to Ulil Abshar Abdalla, a well-known liberal Mohammedan figure who espouses pluralism and religious tolerance.

It came with a threatening letter urging Abdalla to write a preface to the book which was entitled 'They Deserved to be Killed: Because of their Sins to Islam and Mohammedans.'

National Anti-Terror Agency (BNPT) chief Ansyaad Mbai told AFP: 'It's the work of terror group Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) which has been actively launching kabooms in this country.'

JI is a South-east Asian Islamic myrmidon group inspired by Al-Qaeda, which carries out terror attacks to destablise governments in a bid to unite the region into a fundamentalist Islamic state.
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Southeast Asia
Indonesian police arrest 6 terror suspects
2011-01-26
[Straits Times] POLICE have jugged six suspected terrorists, including four teenagers, during a series of raids in central Indonesia.

Ansyaad Mbai, who heads Indonesia's anti-terrorism agency, says several low-explosive weapons also were seized in the raids on Tuesday.

Indonesia, the world's most populous Mohammedan nation, has battled Islamist bully boyz with links to the Southeast Asian network Jemaah Islamiyah since 2002, when bully boyz bombed a nightclub district on Bali island, killing 202 people. There have been at least three deadly attacks across the country since then.

TVOne television reported that among those jugged on Tuesday in the towns of Klaten and Solo were three high school students and one recent high school graduate.
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Southeast Asia
Interview with Indonesian counterterror chief
2010-09-13
Jakarta Post interview with Ansyaad Mbai, the head of Indonesia's new National Antiterrorism Agency (BNPT)
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Southeast Asia
Indonesian police arrest Bashir on terror charges
2010-08-09
Abu Bakar Bashir, the Muslim cleric and 2002 Bali bombings suspect, has been arrested by Indonesian police for alleged involvement with terrorism. His lawyer, Muhammad Ali, said his client was taken in early today, allegedly for involvement with a new militant network in Indonesia's westernmost province of Aceh.

Police said Bashir, 71, was arrested by the Indonesian police anti-terrorist taskforce Detachment 88 while travelling from Ciamis in West Java, where he had been attending Koran recitals, to his home in Solo. Bashir is accused of involvement in an Islamic militant training camp uncovered by police in Aceh province in February, said counter-terrorism chief at the security ministry, Ansyaad Mbai.

"He had been involved in terror network in Aceh. As we know, that terror group in Aceh is linked with Jemaah Islamiah and many other extremist groups in our country," Mbai told Agence France Presse. "One of the allegations is that he provided funding to the Aceh military training. It's one of many allegations weighed against him," he added.

In the aftermath of the discovery of the training camp, police claimed to have killed 13 suspects, including the senior Jemaah Islamiah operative and Bali bomber Dulmatin, and arrested more than 60 others. Three members of Jamaah Ansharut Tauhid, a group established by Bashir after splitting from the Indonesian Mujahadeen Council two years ago, are already under arrest on suspicion of helping to finance the Aceh operation. Rumours have circulated for weeks that Bashir, a fiery preacher known for propagating hatred against foreigners, was next on the list.

On Saturday, police arrested five suspects and seized high-explosive materials in separate anti-terror raids in several areas in West Java province. The target of the alleged terror plots was not immediately clear, but Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono on Saturday said police had foiled a terror plot against him as he visited the province.

Wahyudin, the director of Bashir's Al Mukmin Islamic boarding school in Solo, told the Jakarta Globe today that the cleric's wife, Aisyah, might also have been taken into custody. Police were understood to be transporting Bashir to Jakarta and a police press conference was scheduled for this afternoon.
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Southeast Asia
Indonesia: New anti-terror body
2009-12-11
[Straits Times] INDONESIA will escalate its war against violent extremism by setting up a new agency to coordinate counter-terrorism work by a variety of agencies.

Officials said the Badan Koordinasi Pemberantasan Terrorisme, or Counter-Terrorism Coordinating Agency, will go into action next month, fulfilling a campaign promise made by President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono.

'The agency will be the supreme body for counter-terrorism that reports directly to the President,' said retired police inspector-general Ansyaad Mbai, head of the anti-terror desk at the Coordinating Ministry for Political, Legal and Security Affairs.

While rooting out terrorists and routing their cells remain its key tasks, the new agency will put greater emphasis on prevention.

This will include rehabilitating detained terrorists so that they do not return to their old ways after leaving prison, and clamping down on religious radicalism.

'Besides law enforcement work, the new outfit will work closely with civil society groups in preventing terrorism,' said Mr Ansyaad. 'Counter-terrorism work must not be left to the police alone.
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