Indonesia sentenced seven
men linked to the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) on Tuesday, marking
the first time the world’s most populous Muslim-majority country has sent
anyone to prison for associations with the terror group.
Indonesia
has been looking to crack down on ISIS since a bomb and gun attack in the
capital Jakarta last month killed eight, including the four attackers
themselves (See: “Islamic State Attack in
Indonesia? A Look at the 2016 Jakarta Bombings”). The incident was
the first ISIS attack in Southeast Asia and the first militant attack to hit
Indonesia since twin hotel bombings in 2009 carried out by the Southeast Asian
offshoot of Al-Qaeda, Jemaah Islamiyah.
On
Tuesday, the West Jakarta District Court sentenced four men to between three
and four years in prison for traveling to Syria to join ISIS, while two others
received similar sentences for aiding them. The seventh received a five year
sentence for spreading ISIS propaganda.
“What was
proven was the defendants’ intent to conspire in, assist, and prepare
terrorism-related activities,” the presiding judge Syahlan, who only goes by
one name, said according to Reuters,
adding that it was not necessary to prove they had actually carried out any
attacks.
As I have
written elsewhere, the notable first comes as the Indonesian government under
Joko “Jokowi” Widodo toughens its counterterrorism approach following the
Jakarta bombings (See: “Jakarta Attacks Jolt Indonesia
to Toughen Its Counterterrorism Campaign”). That has included not
only intensifying an ongoing crackdown against militants, but strengthening the
legal tools for its security forces to handle suspected terrorists and
sympathizers and boosting deradicalization programs (See: “Indonesia to Boost
Deradicalization After Islamic State Attack”). Counter-terrorism
officials had estimated that over 500 Indonesians have gone abroad to join the
ISIS, with over 1,000 sympathizers at home.
It also
comes amid warnings by some that more ISIS attacks may be likely in Indonesia
in the coming months. As I noted for The Diplomat recently, a new report
by the influential Jakarta-based Institute for Policy Analysis of Conflict
released earlier this month found that competition among foreign and local
ISIS-linked groups is likely to fuel future violence. By Prashanth Parameswaran
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