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Mudzakir Mudzakir Jemaah Islamiyah Southeast Asia 20021013  

Southeast Asia
Indonesian police investigate boarding school after bombings
2009-07-21
Indonesian police have questioned teachers of an Islamic boarding school in Central Java, following the suicide bombings in Jakarta last week, a cleric said on Tuesday.

As coordinator of Islamic activity in the area, cleric Mudzakir confirmed the probe in the Al-Mukmin Ngruki boarding school. "Three policemen came to the Ngruki boarding school asking teachers and staff members," he told Xinhua over phone from the area.

One of the suspect of the bombing at the JW Marriot Hotel is Nurhasbi alias, who had been studying in the school along with suicide bombers of the hotel in August 2003, which killed 12 people and wounded dozens others, according to local television. "The police come to match up information that they got," said cleric Mudzakir target=_blank>Mudzakir.

The Ngruki boarding school was founded by militant cleric Abu Bakar Bashir, the spiritual head of Jemaah Islamiyah who has been jailed for a conspiracy on terrorism.
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Southeast Asia
Indonesian radicals call for blood
2003-03-20
Edited for spittle
Muslim radicals in Indonesia called for America's blood as security forces brace for a backlash in the world's largest Muslim country in response to the U.S.-led war on Iraq.
Blood! Dire Revenge! Jihad!
Calling America "kafir harbi", an unbeliever who must be fought, a grouping of radical Muslims called upon its followers to rise up to oppose the war. "America is a kafir harbi and that means its blood and property is halal (permitted)," Mudzakir, coordinator of Surakarta Muslims, told CNN, by telephone from Surakarta. "We reject this war on Iraq," Mudzakir added.
In Jakarta, over 1,000 people from the Muslim-oriented Justice Party staged a peaceful demonstration outside the U.S. embassy. Justice Party's chairman Hidayat Nur Wahid urged U.S. President George W. Bush to stop the attacks, saying Iraq had nothing to do with the September 11 attacks on America. "I knock on the door of his conscience to stop this attack on innocent civilians," said Nur Wahid.
Mr. Wahid, we're not attacking innocent civilians. That's a job for islamofundos.
In Jakarta, the Islamic Defenders Front (FPI) said they were considering sending their members to "fight" against the U.S. in Iraq. "It is our duty to fight this attack with all our might," FPI secretary-general, Ahmad Shabri Lubis, told CNN. Asked whether they were going to take up arms, he replied: "Yes, that's possible. We may fight in Iraq or in Indonesia," said Lubis.
"I'd have to see if I can book a flight, you know how if you wait till the last minute how much they charge you."
Indonesian police has put its entire 250,000-strong force on full alert and tightened security round the U.S., British, Australian and other foreign embassies in the country. Laskar Jihad, famed for waging a holy war against Christians on the eastern Maluku islands, urged all Muslims to pressure the government to break-off ties with the U.S government. "I condemn the attack on Iraq and urged Indonesians to pressure the government to break-off ties with the U.S. government," Laskar Jihad's commander Jaffar Umar Thalib, told CNN. An intelligence source told CNN radical groups declared a month ago that they would move the masses to pressure the government to break-off ties with America. If their call was ignored, the goverment must be toppled. "That means they already have put in place plans for agitation," said the intelligence source.
The government may have other ideas, they don't take kindly to being toppled.
Laskar Jihad disbanded itself shortly after the Bali blast which killed more than 200 people on October 12 last year. The group has been blamed for deepening the Maluku conflict which killed more than 10,000 people. Asked whether Laskar Jihad was going to revive its armed wing, Thalib said: "No. We have already disbanded. These days I am into education and have set up a religious boarding school in Yogyakarta".
That would be the type of boarding school with majors in explosives, automatic weapons and mindless killing.
While Laskar Jihad has gained a high profile and notoriety, the group which raises the most concern is the shadowy network responsible for the Bali blast. "This is the group which we must most keep an eye on. We have to be alert to what cannot be seen on the surface and in the public," a military intelligence source told CNN. The country's largest Muslim organisation, Nahdlatul Ulama (NU) which claims 40 million followers, warned there was no guarantee the predominant and moderate religious leaders were able to fully control their followers. "People see this as a war against humanity and they would use this to justify their radicalism. I am not sure this time I can say for certain I can calm the masses like in previous occassion," said NU's chairman, Hasyim Muzadi.
"Hey, if people get killed it's not my fault."
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Southeast Asia
Jakarta Pinpoints Islamic Terror Groups
2002-10-13
Hardline Indonesian Muslim groups, most likely working with the international terrorist ring al Qaeda, are the main suspects for the bombs that devastated Bali’s tourism heart, senior Indonesian intelligence sources say.
Oh, really? Finally noticed, did we?
The intelligence sources say a Pakistani national captured with a quantity of high explosives in the strife-torn Poso area of Central Sulawesi last week had only told his interrogators that the explosives were being prepared for “an American airliner”.
"Oh. Well. That's okay, then..."
One source says there is a high likelihood that Central Java-based cleric Abu Bakar Baasyir is involved but says there is no evidence as yet to link him to the blast.
Apparently, gathering enough evidence against Abu is a physical impossibility...
Baasyir heads a shadowy organisation known as Jemaah Islamiyah (JI), accused of involvement in plots against foreign embassies, including Australia’s, in Singapore and other terrorist crimes. The interrogation had failed to prise any more information out of the man before the explosions occurred in Bali and in the Christian area of Menado, North Sulawesi.
They weren't hitting him hard enough...
The sources say the choice of Bali and Menado was apparently designed to wreak maximum havoc among non-Muslims. “If the bombs had been planted in (the Central Java cities of) Solo or Yogyakarta, there would have been bound to be many Muslim victims,” says one senior intelligence operative attached to the office of the Coordinating Minister for Politics and Security. “That’s why they chose to explode these bombs in Bali and Menado, where the chance of Muslims becoming victims were very small.”
Infidels are nothing but targets...
Indonesia’s security apparatus was locked in meetings yesterday (Sunday), forced to confront the reality of terrorism that it managed for so long to deny.
They'll be back to denying it as soon as they can...
Some official sources continued to paint the Bali terror in the light of domestic political struggles, but most ruled out the possibility that the bombs were the work of elements trying to destroy Indonesia’s image and its current government, and pointed the finger straight at Islamic terrorism. Coordinating Minister for Politics and Security Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono told reporters there were indications of who was responsible. “What is clear, terrorism has occurred. There are plenty of victims and at this stage we do not want to create new problems by accusing group A or group B. It could be foreigners or Indonesians or a combination of both.”
Thank you for that statement of the obvious...
He promised the Indonesian government would act swiftly and harshly, admitting that up until now the government had failed to adopt a clear policy on terrorism. “This incident has created a turning point and from now on the government will not be able to entertain doubts about harsh action.”
Until the local fundos start bitching and rioting again...
In the last few weeks high-ranking officials have finally admitted that foreign terrorists, including al Qaeda members, have either passed through or been based in Indonesia. They have announced the formation of a National Security Council that will report directly to the President, and which sources say is likely to be given powers to detain suspects without charge.
Rather like India's POTO, no doubt...
The change in attitude by Indonesia’s government is believed to have followed extensive talks between President Megawati Sukarnoputri and Karen Brooks, a senior south-east Asia expert at the American government's National Security Council. Ms Brooks, who has been a friend of Megawati’s since her post-graduate studies in Indonesia, showed the president the video footage to prove that terrorism was alive and well in Indonesia. The footage, obtained from a captured German-born Arab, Reda, showed training sessions believed to have been conducted in the Poso area of Sulawesi, where Muslim-Christian conflict has been underway sporadically for the past three years.
That kind of thing has been impossible for the Indonesians to come up with themselves...
The capture and deportation of Omar al-Farouq, a Kuwaiti thought to be among al Qaeda's most senior agents in Southeast Asia, and the arrest of Reda provided plenty more evidence that Indonesia’s earlier equivocal stand on terrorism was misplaced. Adding to the evidence that Indonesians are very much part of al Qaeda is the strong suspicion that two Indonesian terrorists are believed to have trained Filipino Muslim extremists who set a motorbike bomb in General Santos in the south of the country last week. The bomb killed three, including a US soldier, and left another 25 wounded. The Indonesians are believed to be members of Jemaah Islamiyah. They had trained members of the Abu-Sayyaf and Moro Islamic Liberation Front in the manufacture and handling of explosives, The Straits Times reported.
Whereupon the Indonesians contorted themselves into 7000 unlikely positions to deny any link, deny the existence of terror networks in their country, and to become indignant at other countries "meddling" in their affairs...
The men, both from South Sulawesi, were believed to have worked with Omar Al-Faruq. They had gone into hiding following the arrest of fellow JI member Uskar Makawata last month in General Santos, the paper quoted police sources as saying. Makawata, also from South Sulawesi, is being held at a maximum-security prison in Manila for his alleged involvement in a series of bombings in central Mindanao.
And they picked up another one today...
Suspect Islamic cleric Basyir earlier denied allegations that he was involved in terrorism as “a big lie”, saying it was part of a US conspiracy to put him behind bars. He warned that a move against him would amount to an attack against Islam. “I defend Islam. Now it is up to the Indonesian government, police and people to also defend Islam, or to choose to defend America,” he told a press conference. “I am not afraid of arrest. But if they do so without following the law, I will use all my power to fight it. I have lots of Muslim brothers, and they can help me.”
"Screw with me and my boyz will riot and kill people in droves. Don't screw with me and they'll do it anyway."
Mudzakir, a close associate of Basyir’s, said Muslim youth would be told to be ready to sacrifice their lives for the right to defend their religion. “If these leaders are arrested for terror-related charges, then we will have to go all out to fight.”
That's because to Islamists the Great Leader — whoever he happens to be at the moment — is the same thing as Islam itself. Makes it pretty easy to do anything you damn well please...
Despite the hardliner’s threats, pressure was mounting on fundamentalists groups that have been free to operate for the past four years. The leader of the Laskar Jihad movement, which has waged outright war against Christians in Maluku and Poso, is facing charges, and the Islamic Defender’s Front, which has trashed nightlife spots without any police action, suddenly found eight of its members and its leader jailed for the latest attack on nightclubs at the end of September.
Those are baby steps, even though they've been needed. But the Bad Guys have powerful protection in the person of Mr Vice President.
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