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Monday, June 20, 2011


War on Terror
20 Jun 2011, NewAgeIslam.Com
As Indonesia Dismantles Terror Groups, Successors Pose New Risks

Increasing connectivity makes recruitment easier. Videotapes that promote jihad, and translations of Jihadist teachings from the Middle East that were previously passed hand to hand are now available online. The center works with youth leaders, Islamic boarding schools and Muslim organizations, as well as the Departments of Religious Affairs and Education. After three of the men executed for carrying out the 2002 Bali bombing were linked back to Bashir's Ngruki, some analysts turned a harsh eye on Indonesia's Islamic boarding schools, called pesantran. Wahyu Kusuma attended the Pondok Ngruki school briefly in the early 1990s when he was 15. He said he really hated non-Muslims at the time because the school's leader taught them that other religions were wrong, that they were the cause of so many problems. He was lucky that he did not attend fulltime, he said, so eventually he could make his own conclusions. -- Sara Schonhardt

As Indonesia Dismantles Terror Groups, Successors Pose New Risks

By Sara Schonhardt
June 16, 2011
Indonesian militant cleric Abu Bakar Bashir - jailed for 15 years for his involvement with a group that aimed to kill the country's president - speaks to journalists while he waits inside a cell before his trial at South Jakarta court, June 16, 2011
The killing or capture of top militants in Indonesia has fractured extremist movements in the country. Government and security officials now worry; however, the groups are changing targets and recruitment tactics to enlist impressionable youths.
It has been nearly a decade since bomb blasts rocked a nightclub in Bali, killing more than 200 people. In the years since, Indonesia has formed counter-terrorism police squad Densus 88, which has arrested around 600 suspected terrorists.
Analysts say the conviction of firebrand cleric Abu Bakar Bashir signals the government's commitment to punish people who are involved in violent activity. Bashir is considered the spiritual leader of Jemaah Islamiyah (JI), an al-Qaeda-linked group responsible for a wave of terror attacks over the past 10 years.
Public tolerance diminishes
Meanwhile, public support for large-scale attacks aimed at Westerners, like those in Bali, has evaporated.
The changes have shaken extremist groups, and led to smaller, disjointed factions focused on targeting police and non-Muslims who are seen as undermining Islam. But the weakening of JI and others are raising new concerns about youth recruitment.
Noor Huda Ismail, a terrorism analyst and former student of Pondok Ngruki, the Islamic boarding school co-founded by Bashir, said he has noticed a disturbing trend.
"Traditionally, people joining terrorist movements will come from specific schools, like my school Ngruki or Darul Syahadah or al-Muttaqin," said Noor Huda. "Now if you look at the different trend, they come even from secular schools."
Targeting impressionable youths
He said the shift in targets has made it easier for radical groups to persuade youths to join. Many use the idea of establishing an Islamic state to appeal to increasingly conservative or disenfranchised youths who believe the state has failed them.
The International Labor Organization estimates about 23 percent of Indonesian youths are unemployed. That is a startling statistic given that the country's growing economy is creating high-value jobs. The problem, say employers, is the lack of skill and education among new entrants.
Issues, such as unemployment and corruption, influence the way the young generation perceives religion, said Syafii Anwar, director of the International Center for Islam and Pluralism.
And Noor Huda said hardliner groups are perverting the notion of Islam to take advantage of youths who are easily co-opted.
"This has to do also with the lack of critical thinking among the Indonesian youth, and the way we teach religion is more black and white, and encourages intolerance toward differences," he said.
Leveraging the Internet
Increasing connectivity makes recruitment easier. Videotapes that promote jihad, and translations of Jihadist teachings from the Middle East that were previously passed hand to hand are now available online.
To counter those messages, Anwar's center for pluralism has been promoting ideas of democracy, human rights and pluralism through the Internet and by providing CDs that discuss how America and the West perceive Islam.
The center works with youth leaders, Islamic boarding schools and Muslim organizations, as well as the Departments of Religious Affairs and Education.
After three of the men executed for carrying out the 2002 Bali bombing were linked back to Bashir's Ngruki, some analysts turned a harsh eye on Indonesia's Islamic boarding schools, called pesantran.
Wahyu Kusuma attended the Pondok Ngruki school briefly in the early 1990s when he was 15.
He said he really hated non-Muslims at the time because the school's leader taught them that other religions were wrong, that they were the cause of so many problems. He was lucky that he did not attend fulltime, he said, so eventually he could make his own conclusions.
Indoctrinization in radicalism
Boarding schools today are very different, said Kusuma, whose nephews currently attend a moderate, modern pesantran that includes English and computer classes. It is what happens outside the classroom that worries some analysts, who say sports teams and informal religious study groups are prime grounds for recruitment.
Hariyono is a security guard in a village outside Solo, where high-level militant Noordin Top was killed during a police raid in September 2009. Though Hariyono was not aware of Top's background, he said Top used to gather neighborhood youths on his porch for discussion. Had police not gone after Top, Hariyono fears his own son could have adopted extremist ideas.
Radicalism is a process of indoctrinization, he said. It is very easy to influence young people by giving them an idea about the future, especially for young people who don't really have certain ideals or ambitions.
Terrorism analysts say big organizations like JI recognize that in order to rebuild their bases they need to appeal to issues that resonate in local communities. And while they may not be concentrating specifically on youths, it is clear high school students are targets.
But researchers caution that the threat should not be overblown. Many universities now have programs that promote tolerance or connect students with community-building organizations. Supriyadi, a student at state-run Diponegoro University in Semarang, works with Noor Huda on a program that provides employment to former jihadist.
He said he is not worried about threats of terrorism. What is more important is taking the energy and conviction that drives people to extremism and finding a way to do something positive with it.
The related News
Indonesian Cleric Sentenced to 15 Years in Terror Trial
VOA News | Jakarta
June 16, 2011
Radical cleric Abu Bakar Bashir, center, leaves the court after the judges delivered his sentence during his trial at a district court In Jakarta, Indonesia, June 16, 2011
Radical Indonesian cleric Abu Bakar Bashir was sentenced to 15 years in jail on Thursday for terrorism, marking the latest development in the country’s fight against Islamic radicalism.
Supporters of famed firebrand cleric Abu Bakar Bashir cried out as judges sentenced him to 15 years in prison for setting up and financing a militant training camp that was allegedly preparing for targeted terrorist attacks.
Bashir opposed the sentence to shouts of "Allah akbar", or "God is great", from the hundreds of people packed in and around the courthouse. Defense lawyer Adnan Wirawan says they will appeal the verdict.
“We believe that this is absurd, we believe that it’s unreasonable," said Wirawan. "He’s being punished because he is the leader of JAT.”
Wirawan was referring to Jemaah Ansharut Tauhid, the above-ground organization Bashir established in 2008 and which has recently been linked to a series of terror plots.
The verdict is generally seen as adding a heavy blow to extremist networks already crippled by a series of police dragnets since the training camp tied to Bashir was uncovered in February 2010.
Sidney Jones, a senior analyst at the International Crisis Group, says the sentence is evidence of the government’s commitment to punish those who carry out violence. But she also believes the 72-year-old cleric has lost some of his influence.
“I’m not sure his conviction and sentencing will have any major impact on the jihadi movement more generally because I think the groups that are emerging are already acting on their own initiative without needing direction from him,” said Jones.
Around 3,000 police guarded the South Jakarta courthouse in anticipation of a backlash from his followers. The response, however, was fairly muted. Looks of anguish crossed many faces as Bashir read out an opening prayer in which he warned authorities that they had made an enemy of Islam.
Jones says police will need to operate with caution since they could face the brunt of the blame for arresting Bashir.
The sentence ends a six-month trial that saw the aging but vocal Bashir take to the stand with his signature invective. Considered the spiritual leader of Jemaah Islamiyah, a regional terror networked linked to al-Qaeda, Bashir’s sermons have allegedly inspired many of his followers to action.
Several of the men accused for carrying out the 2002 bombing in Bali that killed 202 people were students of the Islamic boarding school he founded.
The trial was the third Bashir has faced over the past three decades and analysts say it was important that the charges stick. He was found guilty of conspiracy for the 2002 Bali bombing but released from his two and half year sentence early.
http://www.voanews.com/english/news/asia/Indonesian-Cleric-Sentenced-to-15-Years-in-Terror-Trial-123985444.html
Source: The Journal, Indonesia

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