Rantburg

Today's Front Page   View All of Sat 05/04/2024 View Fri 05/03/2024 View Thu 05/02/2024 View Wed 05/01/2024 View Tue 04/30/2024 View Mon 04/29/2024 View Sun 04/28/2024
2020-11-24 Southeast Asia
Indonesian Police Arrest Jemaah Islamiyah, JAD Militant Suspects in ‘Pre-emptive’ Raids
[BenarNews] Indonesian counter-terrorism police on Monday announced the arrests of seven members of the nation’s two main Islamic murderous Moslem networks through "pre-emptive" raids carried out during the past few days.

Officers with the elite Densus 88 unit arrested five suspected members of al-Qaeda-linked Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) at separate locations in Banten and neighboring Lampung provinces in a series of raids from Friday through Sunday, police said.

One of those arrested was identified as Ahmad Zaini, JI’s leader in Lebak regency in Banten, provincial police front man Edy Sumardi said.

Continued from Page 1



"The arrests were part of pre-emptive efforts," Edy told BenarNews but declined to elaborate.

The four other JI suspects, identified only by their initials — SA, S, I, and RK — were picked up in Lampung, national police front man Brig. Gen. Awi Setiyono said. He said they belonged to the JI branch in Banten, and three of them were with Adira, the group’s martial arts training wing.

In July, Para Wijayanto, the overall JI leader, was sentenced to seven years in prison for his involvement in terrorism, including sending Jemaah Islamiyah members to Syria.

Indonesian authorities said JI members were behind a series of terrorist attacks in Indonesia since 2000, including two bombings in Bali — which killed a total of 225 people in 2002 and 2005 — and the 2004 Australian embassy bombing, which killed nine.

JAD ARRESTS
Separately, the national police said Densus 88 personnel had arrested two suspected members of Jamaah Ansharut Daulah (JAD), a murderous Moslem network affiliated with Islamic State
...formerly ISIS or ISIL, depending on your preference. Before that they were al-Qaeda in Iraq, as shaped by Abu Musab Zarqawi. They're really very devout, committing every atrocity they can find in the Koran and inventing a few more. They fling Allah around with every other sentence, but to hear western pols talk they're not really Moslems....
(IS), on Friday.

The suspects were captured in the city of Payakumbuh in West Sumatra province and on Batam, an island in Riau Islands province near Singapore, and were identified by their aliases, Abu Singgalang and Abu al-Fatih, police said in a statement.

At al-Fatih’s house, police found a homemade gun, two bows, five arrows and two bayonets, provincial police front man Harry Golden Hart said.

Since June, Indonesian police have arrested more than 80 JAD and JI suspects. Last month, police took four JI suspects into custody in Bekasi, a town just east of Jakarta, including one who had allegedly fought in Syria.

In August, Densus 88 members caught 15 suspected JAD members in Bekasi and Jakarta, including one whom police said had assisted the travel of Indonesians to Syria.

JI’S ’REGENERATION’
Sidney Jones, an expert on Islamic militancy in Indonesia, said that despite having regional bosses, JI’s leadership structure was unclear after Para was imprisoned.

Para restructured JI — al-Qaeda’s affiliate in Southeast Asia — after he assumed leadership of the organization following an Indonesian court ruling in 2007 that banned the group, according to court records.

"In the past, even after the top leader had been arrested, they could not just officially appoint a new emir," Jones told BenarNews, adding, that a successor must have deep religious knowledge and military experience.

Recent arrests of JI members have affected the group significantly, though it is unlikely that JI will cease to exist any time soon, said Jones, director of the Jakarta-based Institute for Policy Analysis of Conflict (IPAC).

"It is possible that all JI activities have been suspended, except for the pesantrens. JI still operates a network of pesantrens,
...Muslim boarding schools in Indonesia that produce a steady flow of jihadi cannon fodder...
mostly in Central Java. So it’s likely that regeneration is happening there," Jones said, referring to Islamic boarding schools.

Jones said she believed that security authorities were concerned about the possible emergence of JI splinter groups that resort to violent mostly peaceful acts.

"If we look at history, JI emerged with its ’splinter’ groups," she said while naming Noordin M. Top, the murderous Moslem responsible for criminal masterminding the Jakarta Marriott hotel bombing in 2003.

Noordin, a Malaysian national, was killed in 2009 during a stand-off with police in the Central Java city of Solo.

"It seems that what the government is worried about is that JI will suddenly resort to violence and bombings," Jones said. "It is possible that some of the dozens who were trained in Syria came back and emerged with a splinter group that is opposed to JI being as passive as it is today."

Police said JI, under Para’s leadership, sent dozens of members to Syria between 2013 and 2018 for military training and to study how the IS implemented its teachings. Jones said some of these JI members were captured in Syria by IS because they refused to pledge allegiance to Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the top leader of Islamic State.

Others left for Syria to train with Islamist opposition forces such as Ahrar al-Sham
...a Syria jihadi group made up of Islamists and salafists, not that there's that much difference, formed into a brigade. They make up the main element of the Islamic Front but they don't profess adoration of al-Qaeda and they've been fighting (mainly for survival) against the Islamic State. Their leadership was wiped out at a single blow by a suicide kaboom at a crowded basement meeting in September, 2014...
, the Free Syrian Army
... the more palatable version of the Syrian insurgency, heavily influenced by the Moslem Brüderbund...
and the al-Nusra
...formally Jabhat an-Nusrah li-Ahli al-Sham (Support Front for the People of the Levant), also known as al-Qaeda in the Levant. They aim to establish a pan-Arab caliphate. Not the same one as the Islamic State, though .. ...
Front, she said.

Earlier this year, analysts Zachary Abuza and Alif Satria said JI was the Indonesian Islamic murderous Moslem group most likely to take advantage of the COVID-19 pandemic and economic downturn that have struck Indonesia.

"By 2019, JI was the strongest it had been since its decline in 2011, running a large network of preachers, corporations, mosques, and plantations," the pair wrote in The Diplomat on June 23.

"JI’s resilience lies in its resources, centralized organizational capacity, and experience in providing social services beyond its immediate constituency, at a time when an armed campaign against the state is deemed counterproductive," they added.
Posted by trailing wife 2020-11-24 00:00|| || Front Page|| [18 views ]  Top
 File under: al-Qaeda 

06:51 NN2N1
06:44 Grom the Reflective
06:42 MikeKozlowski
06:42 Besoeker
06:41 NN2N1
06:40 MikeKozlowski
06:38 MikeKozlowski
06:38 Besoeker
06:38 NN2N1
06:37 Besoeker
06:35 MikeKozlowski
06:23 NN2N1
06:16 Procopius2k
06:14 Procopius2k
06:11 Procopius2k
06:08 NN2N1
05:14 NN2N1
04:45 Grom the Reflective
04:37 Grom the Reflective
04:34 Grom the Reflective
02:01 Angealing+B.+Hayes4677
01:34 Angealing+B.+Hayes4677
00:55 Besoeker









Paypal:
Google
Search WWW Search rantburg.com