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Abu Jibril Abu Jibril Jamaah Islamiyah Southeast Asia 20031009  
  Abu Jibril Supreme Council of Global Jihad Terror Networks 20030813  
  Abu Jibril Jemaah Islamiyah Southeast Asia Indonesian At Large Holy Man 20050608  
    The US State Department in 2003 described Jibril as Jemaah Islamiyah's "primary recruiter and second in command".
Abu Jibril alias Fikiruddin Muqti Abu Jibril alias Fikiruddin Muqti Al Qaeda Southeast Asia 20021212  
  Abu Jibril alias Fikiruddin Muqti Jemaah Islamiyah Southeast Asia 20021212  

Southeast Asia
Bomb suspect was al-Qaeda member: Indonesia
2009-08-28
[Al Arabiya Latest] Indonesian police Thursday were pursuing an al-Qaeda connection to the twin suicide attacks on Jakarta hotels, after confirming that a suspect in custody had been a follower of Osama bin Laden.

National Police Chief Bambang Hendarso Danuri said the suspect, Indonesian publisher and Islamist blogger Mohammed Jibril Abdurahman -- known on the Internet as the "Prince of Jihad" -- was once a member of al-Qaeda.

Mohammed Jibril was arrested outside Jakarta late Tuesday on suspicion of channeling money from abroad to finance the July 17 attacks on the JW Marriott and Ritz-Carlton hotels, which killed nine people including the two bombers.

" Let the process proceed, there will be more developments "
Indonesian National Police Chief Bambang Danuri
The blasts marked the bloody end of a four-year hiatus in such attacks in the world's most populous Muslim country, and have been blamed on a terror network led by Malaysian extremist Noor Eddin Mohammed Top.

Asked by reporters whether Mohammed Jibril had been a member of al-Qaeda, Danuri said "yes." "Let the process proceed, there will be more developments," he said, without elaborating.

Most wanted extremist
Noor Eddin, 41, is the most wanted extremist in Indonesia and calls his group "al-Qaeda in the Malay Archipelago."

He allegedly received al-Qaeda backing for an attack on the Marriott in 2003 which killed 12 people, and is also accused of masterminding attacks on the Australian embassy in 2004 and tourist restaurants in Bali in 2005.

Police say they have killed three cell members and arrested five since July 17 who allegedly smuggled money from abroad to pay for the operation.

The source of the funds is not known, but police said they are investigating whether the money came from al-Qaeda brokers in the Middle East or South Asia, among other possible donors.

Mohammed Jibril studied Islam in Karachi, southern Pakistan, where he joined an al-Qaeda-affiliated group known as al-Ghuraba.
Mohammed Jibril studied Islam in Karachi, southern Pakistan, where he joined an al-Qaeda-affiliated group known as al-Ghuraba, or The Foreigners, according to analysts such as the Brussels-based International Crisis Group (ICG).

Al-Ghuraba was set up in 1999 by Hambali, the Indonesian alleged point-man for al-Qaeda in Southeast Asia who is in U.S. custody at Guantanamo Bay, analysts said.

It trained Southeast Asian members of the Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) regional terror network blamed for the 2002 Bali bombings that killed 202 people, and served as a conduit between JI and al-Qaeda.

Al-Ghuraba
" As a student there, anyone can join any organization such as al-Ghuraba -- it's not forbidden "
Irfan S. Awwas, spokesman of Jibril family
The August 2003 arrest of Hambali, seen as JI's operations chief, led to the breakup of al-Ghuraba but analysts said the Pakistan connection could have been re-established and used to finance the latest attack in Indonesia.

Hambali's younger brother and al-Ghuraba alumni Gun Rusman Gunawan was sentenced to four years' jail in Indonesia in 2004 for helping to finance the 2003 Marriott attack. He served only two years and is now free.

A spokesman for Mohammed Jibril's family, Irfan S. Awwas, rejected accusations the publisher had any role in the hotel attacks. "Do you think al-Ghuraba is a terrorist movement?" he asked reporters as he appeared with the suspect's father, radical cleric Abu Jibril, at the national police headquarters to demand Mohammed Jibril's release. "As a student there (in Pakistan), anyone can join any organization such as al-Ghuraba -- it's not forbidden."

Mohammed Jibril's publishing company, Ar-Rahmah, has sold al-Qaeda propaganda videos in Indonesia and last year launched Jihadmagz magazine, which glorifies global terror attacks.

His father was arrested in Malaysia in 2001 on suspicion of being a JI member. He was deported to Indonesia in 2003 but served only about five months in jail for using a forged passport.

He now runs a website, which also supports radical Islamist groups and spouts jihadist ideology.
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Southeast Asia
'Prince of Jihad' arrested in Indonesia
2009-08-26
THE owner of a radical Islamist website who calls himself the Prince of Jihad in his blog postings has been arrested in connection with the Jakarta hotel bombings.
Counter-terror squad officers arrested Muhamad Jibril Abdurahman, alias Muhamad Ricky Ardan bin Mohammad Iqbal, near Jakarta late yesterday and also raided the office of his website, Arrahmah.com, a police spokesman said.

Police believe the Pakistan-educated suspect helped channel funds from abroad to finance the July 17 twin suicide bombings on the JW Marriott and Ritz-Carlton hotels that killed nine people, including six foreigners.

The source of the funds is not known, but police have said they are investigating whether the money came from al-Qaeda brokers in the Middle East, among other possible donors.

Muhamad Jibril is well-known in Indonesian radical circles as a publicist of extremist material, and is the son of a firebrand Islamist cleric who has been linked in the past to the Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) regional terror network.

In addition to the website, he edited a publication called Jihadmagz which espoused jihad or "holy war" against the West.

"He chose his jihad path through working in the media. He felt there were many Muslims who were being suppressed everywhere and there was a war of thoughts," Indonesian extremism analyst Noor Huda Ismail said.

Police said Muhamad Jibril was an accomplice of Saudi national Al Khalil Ali, who was arrested earlier this month on suspicion of smuggling money from abroad to pay for the attacks.

Muhamad Jibril, believed to be aged in his mid-20s, is the son of Indonesian cleric Abu Jibril who was arrested in Malaysia in 2001 on suspicion of being a senior JI member.

The father was deported to Indonesia where he served about five months in jail for using a forged passport. He now runs a website, Abujibriel.com, which also supports radical Islamist groups and spouts jihadist ideology.

"Jihad and terrorism are not something to be afraid of or avoided, because to cause terror to Allah's enemies is the instruction of Islam," said an article by the Prince of Jihad which appeared on both websites after the July 17 attacks.
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Southeast Asia
Islamic terrorists set free
2006-11-16
ALMOST 60 jailed Islamic extremists linked to such atrocities as the Bali bombings have been set free. They include 14 terrorists who have been quietly released in the past two months.

Many of those who walked free in October and this month had at least two months cut from their sentences under Indonesia's justice system.

They were convicted on charges linked to the two Bali bombings, attacks on the Australian Embassy and Marriott Hotel in Jakarta, and other atrocities.

The latest releases, and that in June of Jemaah Islamiah's spiritual leader Abu Bakar Bashir, have outraged families who lost loved ones in the 2002 and 2005 Bali terrorist strikes.

Dozens more had been arrested by Indonesian police, often with the help of Australian authorities, and held for just days or weeks before being freed for lack of evidence. Those questioned but freed include Jemaah Islamiah member Bambang Tutuko, who was believed to have been trained in bomb making under the notorious Dr Azahari Husin. He was held for just one day in September 2003.

Australian survivors of the attacks were shocked last night to learn those responsible had escaped justice.

"They've probably been in jail for maybe a couple of years. That's not enough. They're accessories to murder, they played a part in killing 202 people," said Melbourne man Dale Atkin, who suffered severe burns in the Sari Club bombing in 2002.

Other survivors feared those set free could be plotting more terrorist attacks.
"While they're alive they've still got the opportunity to plan these attacks," said Leanne Woodgate, who escaped death when she fled Paddy's bar.

More than 200 prisoners are in Indonesian jails as a result of terrorism-related offences.

But the dozens already released had been arrested for connections to the Bali, Australian Embassy and Marriott bombings, terror-linked weapons offences and a string of Christmas Eve church bombings in 2000.

Others had harboured known terrorists who were being hunted for the 2002 Kuta attacks that killed 202 people, including 88 Australians.

Among those freed in the past two months are:

SIROJUL Munir bin Achmad Asumi, convicted of providing money and harbouring terrorists after the Bali bombings, given a two-month remission on a five-year sentence.

GUN GUN Rusman Gunawan, jailed for involvement in JI's al-Ghuraba cell and document fraud. Also linked to financing the 2003 Marriott blast, which killed 12. Released at the end of Ramadan.

MUHAJIR bin Amin, Sukastopo bin Kartomiarjo and Eko Hadi Prasetyo bin Sukastopo, arrested in 2003 for helping hide Bali bomber Ali Imron in Kalimantan – each received a two-month sentence reduction.

MUHAMMAD Rusi bin Salim, KOMPAK member, also concealed the whereabouts of Imron while he was on the run.

PURYANTO, alias Pak De, helped hide Imron and fellow bomber Mubarok – later received a two-month remission.

ABDUL Haer, Mujahidin KOMPAK member arrested in 2003 in connection with attacks in Poso, sentenced to four years but released early.

ARMAN, Andang, Hamdan, Syafri and Hendra Yadi, also Mujahidin KOMPAK members arrested for the Poso attack, released this month.

Freed earlier were JI member Dedi Mulyadi, who was involved in the Christmas 2000 bombings in Java and released in 2004. Firmansyah, alias Edi Harun, was also freed after about two years' jail for helping hide Imron.

And like JI leader Bashir who was controversially freed after 2 1/2 years, Abu Jibril, a close associate of Bashir and a primary recruiter for the group, was held for less than 3 1/2 years.

Originally detained in Malaysia, Jibril was sentenced to 5 1/2 months for immigration and forgery but authorities could not lay terrorism charges.

Dozens of other suspected militants were also picked up but were unable to be prosecuted because of lack of evidence. They include Dahlan, aka Leo, a JI member and trained bomb-maker who was held for a week.
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Southeast Asia
Abu Jibril sez US behind bombing of his house
2005-06-09
Muslim cleric Abu Jibril says a bomb blast outside his house on Jakarta's southern outskirts might have been masterminded by the US in an effort intimidate him into stopping his campaign for an Islamic state. The bomb exploded at about 4.30am Wednesday (8/6/05) outside the rented house occupied by Jibril, his pregnant wife and seven of their 11 children at the Witana Harja residential complex in Pamulang, Banten province.

The blast left only a 6-centimeter deep hole in the front yard of the house and caused no injuries, but it could be heard over a radius of several hundred meters, causing many locals to panic. Police found a timer, battery, wires, plastic and low-grade explosives at the scene.

Jibril was at the nearby Al-Munawwarah Mosque, performing pre-dawn prayers, at the time of the blast. He was taken to South Jakarta Police headquarters at 11.45am, questioned as a witness from 2pm to 6pm, and then released. Upon arrival at police headquarters, he told reporters the bombing was certainly "engineered", but he initially declined to speculate on the identity of those behind the attack. "This was engineered because I was praying at the mosque when the bomb exploded at my house," he was quoted as saying by detikcom online news portal.
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Southeast Asia
Bomb explodes outside JI #2's house
2005-06-08
A small bomb exploded Wednesday outside the house of an Indonesian cleric accused by the United States of being a senior member of the Jemaah Islamiyah terror network, police said. No one was injured in the attack. Indonesian police were investigating the blast at the house of Abu Jibril on the southern outskirts of the capital, Jakarta, a national police spokesman said. The blast, which occurred shortly before dawn, caused no damage to the house, said Fauzan Anshorim, a spokesman for Jibril.

Jibril was praying at a local mosque when the blast occurred, Anshorim said. "We suspect this was act of terror to intimidate (Jibril) into stopping his campaign for an Islamic state in Indonesia,'' Anshorim told The Associated Press. In 2003, the United States blocked Jibril's assets and called him the "primary recruiter and second in command'' of Southeast Asia's al-Qaida-linked terror group, Jemaah Islamiyah. Indonesian police say they are monitoring the cleric's activities, but have no evidence to charge him with terrorism. Jibril, 47, regularly preaches sermons in which he calls for the overthrow of Indonesia's secular government, but in a recent interview with The AP denied any links to terrorism. He was arrested in Malaysia in June 2001 for alleged militant activities but was released in 2003.
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Southeast Asia
Blast at home of Indon 'militant'
2005-06-08
A SMALL bomb exploded today at a house rented by an Indonesian Muslim preacher who was once detained for two years without trial in Malaysia for alleged involvement in terrorism, a fellow activist said. No one was injured in the blast on the outskirts of Jakarta, Irfan Awwas, chairman of the hardline group Indonesian Mujahedin Council, said. The preacher, Muhammad Iqbal, also known as Abu Jibril, was being questioned by police, Mr Awwas told AFP. "We condemn this heinous terror attack. We suspect that police are trying to twist facts by putting the blame on the victims," he said. Mr Awwas said police searched the house after the explosion, which occurred in the grounds near the garage. An AFP photographer at the scene said the blast caused no damage to the house.

Iqbal was held for two years in Malaysia under the country's harsh Internal Security Act, which allows detention without trial, for alleged involvement with the Kumpulan Mujahidin Malaysia, a militant group seeking to set up an Islamic state. He was deported to Indonesia last year and was subsequently jailed for six months for immigration offences. The United States has accused Iqbal of being a primary recruiter and second in command of South-East Asia's extremist group Jemaah Islamiyah, which is linked to al-Qaeda.
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Southeast Asia
Indonesian Muslims say those who desecrate Quran should be killed
2005-05-23
JAKARTA: Hardline Indonesian Muslims at a rally by thousands on Sunday vowed to wage war against America and said those who desecrate the Quran should be killed. "Destroy America and its allies! Kill those who desecrate Islam!" Muhammad Iqbal alias Abu Jibril, from the Indonesian Mujahedin Council (MMI), exhorted thousands of protestors through a public address system outside the US embassy. Muslims around the world have demonstrated in recent days against alleged abuse of the Muslim holy book at the US detention facility in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.
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Southeast Asia
Accused Indonesian Cleric Preaches Jihad
2005-05-12
Dressed in flowing brown robe and turban, Abu Jibril raised his fist and promised worshippers in a packed suburban mosque that every coin they donate to overthrow Indonesia's secular government will be repaid hundreds of times over in heaven. "The government no longer looks to Allah, but to America," said the soft-spoken preacher, who argues that only jihad, or holy war, can establish an Islamic state in the 210 million-strong country, home to more Muslims than any other. "Prepare your forces and banish the enemy."

Two years after Washington blocked Jibril's assets and declared him a terrorist - the alleged "primary recruiter and second in command" of Southeast Asia's deadliest al-Qaida-linked group, Jemaah Islamiyah - he's back delivering extremist sermons. Indonesian authorities keep Jibril under surveillance, but say they have no evidence he has committed a crime in the country, where he was deported after his release a year ago from prison in Malaysia. Now, he travels, preaches and meets other known extremists and followers.

His case presents a dilemma for Indonesia as it tries to balance U.S. demands to further crack down on Islamic terrorists with the need to preserve democratic freedoms ushered in after the 1998 downfall of the dictator Suharto. It also illustrates the difficulties authorities in Southeast Asia and elsewhere face in bringing to court terrorist suspects who have operated outside their countries. In cases against alleged militants, getting admissible evidence across borders has proved difficult.
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Southeast Asia
Local al-Qaeda affiliates coming out of the woodwork in Aceh
2005-02-01
The humanitarian catastrophe caused by the 26 December tsunami has led to an outpouring of humanitarian aid and support from some unlikely quarters. While media attention has focused on how the relief efforts will affect the Indonesian armed forces (TNI) counter-insurgency campaign against the Acehnese separatist movement, GAM, the real security issue is how militant Islamist organizations and charities, especially the Indonesian Mujahideen Council (MMI), the Islamic Defenders Front (FPI), the Laskar Mujahideen and the Medical Emergency Relief Charity (MER-C), and a handful of others are taking advantage of the situation.

With the exception of the FPI, all of the above-mentioned organizations are linked to Jemaah Islamiyah (JI), a regional affiliate of al-Qaida, which has been responsible for three major terrorist attacks in Indonesia since the Bali bombing in October 2002. Moreover, all four organizations were involved in fomenting the sectarian conflict in the Malukus and Central Sulawesi, from 1999-2001, which left more than 9'000 people dead. On 4 January, the MMI dispatched the first group of 77 volunteers to Aceh, from their Jogyakarta based headquarters as part of a 206-man contingent. The MMI is an overt civil society organization that was founded in August 2000 by the alleged spiritual chief of Jemaah Islamiyah, Abu Bakar Baasyir. Many of its senior leadership positions were held by members of JI or their kin. For example, MMI leaders Mohammad Iqbal Abdurrahman (a.k.a. Abu Jibril) and Agus Dwikarna were not only members of JI's shura, but also heads of the two paramilitary organizations, the Laskar Mujahideen and the Laskar Jundullah, established by JI to engage in sectarian conflict in 1999-2001.

The Laskar Mujahideen is inextricably linked to JI and al-Qaida. Founded in January 2000 by Jibril and JI's operational chief Hambali, the organization fielded roughly 500 armed combatants. They were armed by JI operatives in the southern Philippines, and were equipped with high-speed motor boats. Laskar Mujahideen operatives worked closely with al-Qaida operatives, such as Omar al-Faruq and the jihadist filmmaker Reda Seyam. Malaysian authorities detained Jibril in June 2001 and deported him to Indonesia in the summer of 2004, where he was detained on immigration offenses but quietly acquitted and released last October. Indonesian authorities asserted that they did not have enough evidence to link Jibril to any terrorist attacks, and downplayed his involvement with Laskar Mujahideen. (The US Treasury had placed Jibril on their list of specially Designated Global Terrorists.)

Since 2001, with Jibril's arrest and the crackdown against JI members, the Laskar Mujahideen (and its fraternal organization the Laskar Jundullah) has gone completely underground. Although it was thought to be behind some of the sporadic violence in the Malukus that resumed in 2004, most Indonesian police and intelligence officials interviewed by this author assume the group had disbanded. Yet the Laskar Mujahideen dispatched some 250 persons to Aceh, over 50 of whom were ferried aboard Indonesian military planes. They established four base camps in the province, including one outside the airport, adjacent to the camps of other domestic and international relief organizations, beneath a sign that reads, "Islamic Law Enforcement". Unlike the MMI, which is more concerned with providing "spiritual guidance" and restoring "infrastructure in places of religious duties," the Laskar Mujahideen has been involved in relief work, including the distribution of aid and the burial of corpses. The MMI and Laskar Mujahideen have been joined by a small Indonesian charity that was previously an important executor agency for Saudi funding. The Medical Emergency Relief Charity (MER-C) was established on 14 August 1999 in response to sectarian strife. They now have 12 offices in Indonesia, concentrated in the regions most directly affected by sectarian violence (Sulawesi, Malukus and Kalimintan). In 2000-2001, MER-C produced two well-publicized jihadi videos for fund-raising purposes. While MER-C members were not implicated in directly supporting Laskar Jundullah and Laskar Mujahideen paramilitary operations in the Malukus and Central Sulawesi, to the degree that another Indonesian charity KOMPAK was, its one-sided approach to the Malukus conflict, as well as the actions of some individual members, inevitably raised suspicions. MER-C's operations abroad, particularly in Iraq, Palestine and Afghanistan, have also raised some concerns. Indeed, the MER-C website states that they operate in the tribal areas of Pakistan with the support and permission of the Taliban. This is not to cast aspersions on what MER-C has been able to accomplish in Aceh. According to a separate English language website, they have used donations to buy medicine and basic foodstuffs as well as rent tractors and bulldozers to clear rubble and distribute food. The

FPI, founded by the fiery cleric Habib Rizieq in August 1998, has also taken a high profile position in Aceh. The group, best known for destroying bars, night-clubs, massage parlors and discos, dispatched 250 activists to Aceh and promised to send an additional 800. "FPI is not only an organization that destroys bars and discos in major Java cities, it has a humanitarian side as well that the media is not happy to expose," asserted Hilmy Bakar Alascaty, the head of the FPI's contingent in Aceh. Alascaty stated that the military had provided the group with air transport and that Vice-President Jusuf Kalla had arranged for FPI members to travel on a government-chartered plane. He announced that in addition to providing aid and burying corpses, his group would ensure that foreign soldiers did not violate Islamic law.

Interestingly, Hizb-ut-Tahrir, the seemingly ubiquitous Pan-Islamic organization, is also on the ground in Aceh. The hardline Wahhabi organization, Hidayatullah, does not yet have a presence in Aceh, but they are raising money for mosque reconstruction through their website and other media organs. The central questions, of course, revolve around the possible ulterior motives of these Islamic organizations. Broadly speaking, and aside from a genuine desire to assist fellow countrymen and Muslims, these organizations are motivated by four objectives. The first is extensive press and media attention. It is particularly instructive that in the April 2004 parliamentary election, the party that had the most spectacular gains was the Prosperous Justice Party (PKS), which increased its share of the vote from under 2 per cent in 1999 to almost 8 per cent. While there is a debate over the degree to which the PKS has downplayed its Islamist goals, all acknowledge that the party's popularity was in large part due to their anti-corruption stance and high-profile charitable relief work. Indeed, the PKS has dispatched almost 1'000 cadres to Aceh, one of the largest contingents thus far. Their previous work in the sectarian conflicts of Poso, Sulawesi and the Malukus, confirmed in them the belief that humanitarian aid is a very effective way to win the hearts and minds of an afflicted community and garner support for their political program.

Secondly, these groups are dedicated to cleansing Indonesia of western influence. From their posturing and rhetoric, it is apparent than none believe the Americans or Australians are motivated by sheer altruism, but have an ulterior motive. It should be noted that even the PKS has called on foreign troops to be in the restive province for no more than a month. Thirdly, these groups see the disaster as an opportunity to proselytize. Several groups, such as the MMI, indicated that their primary goal was to provide "spiritual guidance" to victims and assist in the reconstruction of mosques. With 400'000 refugees and mosques at the center of rural community relief efforts, the potential for influence is great. Fourthly, these organizations all seek to provide relief and assistance in order to discredit the corrupt, secular regime that they seek to replace. The slow and haphazard response of the Indonesian government's relief efforts confirms their belief that the government is unable and unwilling to truly serve the needs of the Muslim community.

The Indonesian government has shown little concern about the motives of these organizations. It was only after international donor organizations raised the alarm that the TNI expelled 19 MMI members from Aceh. There are many possible explanations as to why the TNI assisted their movement to Aceh; with the role of the so-called "green generals" or the machinations of army Chief General Ryamizard Ryacudu, who is engaged in a pitched political battle with President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono, amongst the favorites. Ironically, the Acehnese separatist organization GAM has raised the sharpest concern about their presence. While the radical groups have supported Shari'ah law and other concessions that GAM has wrought from the government, they do not support their secessionist insurgency. To that end, it is likely that the TNI will not divert its resources to these groups and will instead focus on resuming the war against GAM. What is the implication for the US? The most pressing issue is the legal ramifications of the TNI's assistance to the militants. In addition to transport, they have provided tents and equipment. Under the terms of the Lehey Amendment, the TNI is to sever relations with all militia groups. This is acutely consequential as many in the US Executive Branch seek to use the humanitarian crisis as a cover for lifting congressional restrictions on bilateral military relations. How the US deals with this sensitive issue will likely have a significant impact on the dynamics of Islamic militancy in Indonesia.
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Southeast Asia
Abu Jibril sprung
2004-10-27
After spending more than three years behind bars in Malaysia and Indonesia, radical Indonesian cleric Abu Jibril is finally a free man. He was released from Central Jakarta's Salemba jail at 12.10am Thursday after a serving a sentence of five months and 15 days for immigration offenses. Jibril alias Muhammad Iqbal Abdul Rahman (47) was first arrested in Malaysia on June 30, 2001, during a crackdown on local militant organization Kumpulan Militan Malaysia and regional terrorism group Jemaah Islamiyah. He was detained for two years under Malaysia's tough Internal Security Act on suspicion of links to terrorism. He was then held for almost a year on immigration violations, before being deported on May 14, 2004.

Jibril was immediately taken into custody upon his arrival in Jakarta. Prosecutors initially accused him of involvement in several bombings in Indonesia but later dropped the charges due to a lack of evidence. Central Jakarta District Court on October 19 sentenced Jibril to five months and 15 days in jail for falsifying his identity, after he confessed to having provided false data to obtain a passport from the Indonesian Embassy in Kuala Lumpur in April 1999. He had changed his name to Fihiruddin Moqtie bin Abdul Rahman on his identity card and later identified himself as Muhammad Iqbal bin Arrahman to obtain the passport, which also stated he was born in Yogyakarta, whereas his actual birthplace was Lombok island in West Nusa Tenggara province. He also admitted to using a broker and colluding with an embassy official to get the passport.

The cleric was released on Thursday as he had already served more than five months on remand. "Abu Jibril left Salemba jail at 12.10am precisely. He is in good health and feels relieved to be free," his lawyer Munarman was quoted as saying by detikcom online news portal. The lawyer said Jibril's first act as a free man would be to have a pre-dawn meal with members of the Indonesian Mujahidin Council (MMI), which is chaired by his older brother Irfan S. Awwas.
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Southeast Asia
Indonesian police questioning Abu Jibril
2004-05-15
Indonesian police on Friday were questioning a suspected senior member of the Jemaah Islamiyah regional extremist network deported earlier by Malaysia, a senior officer said. Mohamad Iqbal Abdul Rahman, also known as Abu Jibril or Fihirudin, was in Jakarta and "still being questioned" by Indonesian detectives, Brigadier General Pranowo, director of the police anti-terrorism branch, told AFP.

He did not elaborate but said Abu Jibril’s questioning "has nothing to do with JI." Inspector General Paiman, the national police spokesman, said Jibril is being questioned in connection with the alleged falsification of documents and giving false testimony. "He’s being questioned now in connection with false evidence in the case of his passport," Paiman said. Indonesia’s chief of detectives, Commissioner General Suyitno Landung, separately told reporters "so far there isn’t a connection" between Jibril and bombing cases. Malaysia deported Jibril earlier Friday just hours before the High Court was due to hear an application for his release, a Malaysian government lawyer said.

The Indonesian preacher was sent back by the immigration department, which had been holding him since he was freed from a detention camp last August, Deputy Public Prosecutor Fadzilah Begum told the court. Malaysian judges had last week ordered that Jibril be produced before them on Friday afternoon after his lawyers sought a habeas corpus ruling pressing for his release. Jibril, 46, who has a Malaysian wife, was arrested in June 2001 for alleged militant links.
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Southeast Asia
Malaysian court halts deportation of Abu Jibril
2003-10-09
A Malaysian court Wednesday granted an Indonesian named as a senior member of the Jamaah Islamiyah (JI) terror network a stay against his deportation, the official Bernama news agency reported. Mohamad Iqbal Abdul Rahman, also known as Abu Jibril, was released in August after two years in detention but immediately held by the immigration department pending deportation to Indonesia. The alleged militant, who held permanent resident status in Malaysia, then appealed to the High Court against a declaration that he is an undesirable person and a prohibited immigrant. The court said it would deliver judgement on November 11. The release of Mohamad Iqbal has raised eyebrows as Malaysia is still holding more than 90 other Muslim militants. Many are suspected members of JI, the al-Qaeda-linked Southeast Asian network blamed for a string of attacks including last year's Bali bombings. Indonesian Foreign Minister Hassan Wirayuda has said police would question Mohamad Iqbal about his possible links to terrorism if he was sent back to Indonesia.
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