For years the police had crowed about having Jemaah Islamiyah, a
Southeast Asian terrorist network affiliated with Al Qaeda, in retreat, rooting
out its members in raid after raid and foiling one attack after another.
That narrative was shattered last week, when a raid that uncovered an
arms-making operation in Central Java revealed a new reality, according to
officials: JI was in the ascendancy.
“The new
JI cell is very neat and organized,” a source with Densus 88, the National
Police’s counterterrorism unit, told the Jakarta Globe.
“They
have proper management, soldiers and an Amir [leader],” the source added,
speaking on condition of anonymity. “We estimate them to have at least 3,000
soldiers and we think the Amir is a returning old player.”
The
source said that the terror suspects arrested last week in Klaten, Central
Java, were linked to Eko Budi Wardoyo, a hard-line Islamic cleric who was
involved in a bombing at a market in Poso, Central Sulawesi, in 2005 in which
22 people were killed and more than 40 injured.
Eko was
subsequently arrested and tried, and in 2010 was convicted and sentenced to 10
years in prison. Many of his associates from the bombing, though, have been on
the run for nearly a decade, during which they formed a new cell, according to
the police source.
‘Exaggerated enormity’
But the
new picture being painted, of JI having regrouped and reorganized into a more
effective unit, is disputed by others, who also question the timing of the
revelation, less than two months before the country goes to the polls in an
all-important presidential election.
“Recently
this issue has gotten a lot of attention, and I think the enormity of the
matter has been exaggerated,” says Mahfudz Siddiq, a senior member of the
Prosperous Justice Party, or PKS, which draws its support from a conservative
Islamic base.
“Many of
JI’s leaders have been arrested. I think they’re in decline,” Mahfudz says.
He cites
the number of high-profile JI operatives who have either been captured or
killed by security forces since the group peaked with the 2002 and 2005 Bali
bombings: bombmaker Azahari Husin, killed in 2005; bombmaker and financier
Noordin M. Top, gunned down in 2009; and Hambali, the group’s former military
leader and once referred to as the “Osama bin Laden of Southeast Asia,” who was
captured in Thailand in 2003 and is now being held by the US government at its
notorious Guantanamo Bay facility.
Abu
Bakar Bashir, the firebrand cleric who was JI’s spiritual leader, was in 2011
sentenced to 15 years in prison on a raft of terrorism charges.
Mahfudz,
who serves on the House of Representatives’ Commission II, overseeing domestic
affairs, says that while he does not believe JI is making a comeback,
acknowledges that the group remains a menacing presence in the country.
“In my
view, they are not growing stronger. It’s just that their recruitment and
radicalization processes are still working,” he says.
He
stresses the need to rehabilitate terror operatives currently in prison, to
stop them from proselytizing others, and for effective public engagement
measures to change the prevailing mind-set among some Indonesians that armed
extremism is a righteous path and that there is honor in being martyred for the
terrorist cause.
Mahfudz
says these preventive measures are necessary for Indonesia to take, in addition
to the “corrective” approach, or raids, long adopted by Densus 88.
“I want
to stress that legal and corrective approaches alone will never end this
cycle,” he says. “Corrective measures have been carried out, but unless we
tackle the ongoing problem of recruitment and radicalization, we can never end
the cycle.
“Arrests
and punitive measures alone do not solve the problem,” Mahfudz adds.
Politically engineered?
For some
observers, the timing of the recent reveal is the real story.
Analysts
note that by putting the extremist Islamic fringe under the national glare, the
police may be trying to paint the coalition of presidential hopeful Prabowo
Subianto in a bad light, given that four of the six parties in his coalition,
including the PKS, are Islamic-based parties.
Bambang
Widodo Umar, a security analyst and former senior police official, says he was
especially alarmed by the possibility that the police would do this.
“The
police should not act with political purposes in mind,” he tells the Globe.
“When such [terror-related] arrests are made, they should be made purely for
the criminal aspect.”
Haris
Azhar, the coordinator of the Commission for Missing Persons and Victims of
Violence, or Kontras — which has long called for Prabowo to be brought to
justice for a slew of alleged human rights abuses during his time in the
military — is also concerned that there might be a political motive for the
police’s alarmist declaration that JI is on the rise.
“I won’t
go so far as to be too suspicious about it, but I think there’s the
possibility” that the situation has been politically engineered, he says.
“But we
shouldn’t be too rash to draw such a conclusion,” he adds.
By Josua Gantan &
Farouk Arnaz
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