500 Indonesians have gone
to Syria and joined ISIS – 4 percent of all Indonesians support ISIS. Indonesia
has a population of over 250 million, with more than 85 percent identifying as
Muslims. An alarming 4 percent can definitely grow as more [Indonesian] Muslims
see IS as the only power that can resist Western hegemony
Experts on
counterterrorism and religion are calling on the Indonesian government and
mainstream Muslim organizations to openly and proactively contain the spread of
the Islamic State movement, as a survey showed there was a relatively small but
nonetheless "alarming" number of supporters in the country.
Pew Research Center on Tuesday published
its latest findings on the issue, which said 79
percent of 1,000 Indonesian respondents from across the archipelago held
unfavorable views of IS, the movement that established a caliphate in
parts of Iraq and Syria in June last year and has since claimed responsibility
for a series of brutal attacks around the world.
Only 4 percent of Indonesian
respondents stated that they supported the radical movement, while the
remainder declined to disclose their opinion.
"The finding is alarming for us
because the [4 percent] figure can definitely grow as more [Indonesian]
Muslims see IS as the only power that can resist Western hegemony," Fajar
Riza Ul Haq, an Islamic scholar and executive director of the Maarif Institute,
told the Jakarta Globe on Wednesday.
Other observers agree that support
for IS, even if it is relatively small, is dangerous.
Taufik Andrie, a counterterrorism expert
with the Jakarta-based Institute for International Peace Building,
told the Globe that although the number of IS supporters in Indonesia seems
minor, this group still constitutes a threat to the country's secular
state ideology known as Pancasila.
"If the number rises, the public's
perception of IS can change in favor of them and there will be an endless
confrontation in Indonesia," Taufik said.
Authorities have said that an estimated
500 Indonesians have gone to Syria and joined the radical movement, which has
claimed responsibility for attacks that killed hundreds in the past three
weeks alone, in Paris, Beirut and onboard a Russian passenger jet flying
over Egypt's Sinai peninsula.
Indonesia has a population of over 250
million, with more than 85 percent identifying as Muslims.
According to Taufik, supporters of the IS
movement in Indonesia can be divided into three clusters: core
supporters that include radical groups such as the East Indonesia
Mujahidin (MIT) and Jemaah Islamiyah; a group that fully understands and
approves of the caliphate as a form of state; and a group of poorly educated
Indonesian Muslims who are easily brainwashed by the concept of Islamic rule.
Fajar pointed out that the economic and
political instability in the world today likely was to blame for the
mindset of people supporting IS, in Indonesia and elsewhere, but he
stressed that this should never be used as a justification for radical
actions.
He also said that the Darul Islam movement
in Indonesia, which fought for an Islamic state until the early 1960s in
various parts of the archipelago, has also left its marks and made some
Indonesians more susceptible to ideologies like that of IS, until today.
Taufik added that support for the IS
movement was generally based on teachings that instruct Muslims to support
a caliphate as that would allow for the implementation
of Shariah law.
"[This goes] especially
for the men, who are expected to be proactive in showing their
support, which eventually prompts them to move to the self-proclaimed caliphate
from their 'infidel' country," he said.
Fajar expressed concerns that the presence
of IS supporters -- even in small numbers -- could also damage the image
of Indonesia, which has the world's largest Muslim population.
"The world's views of Islam in
Indonesia are actually improving, although they're not yet strongly
established," Fajar said. "As the situation in Middle Eastern countries
is becoming more volatile, we can be the new face of Islam, one that is
moderate and relatively stable."
To contain the spread of IS and other
radical movements in Indonesia, the experts said the government and
mainstream Muslim groups -- such as the Indonesian Ulema Council (MUI),
Nahdlatul Ulama and Muhammadiyah -- must do more to dominate public
platforms and boost moderate understandings of Islam.
Taufik stressed that moderate Muslim
groups should get organized and speak up, as groups of IS supporters become
increasingly outspoken on social media, at mosques and even in some schools.
"We must contest their ideology and
prove that not everything that they believe in is right," he said.
Maarif Institute's Fajar added that
mainstream Muslim groups must continuously spread Islamic teachings that uphold
and respect diversity, and explain that true Islam condemns violent
actions, especially murdering people in the name of religion.
"The challenge lies in how to make
sure that Islam can't be built and developed on top of hatred, feuds and
revenge," he says.
"Indonesian Muslims, as the majority
of the population, therefore must play a bigger role in protecting our unity
against sectarian conflicts that eventually will damage Islam,"
Fajar said.
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