Rantburg

Today's Front Page   View All of 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 View Sat 04/27/2024
2021-08-29 Home Front: WoT
After 15 Years at Gitmo, Bali Bombing Suspects to Get Day in Court
[BenarNews] Three suspects in the 2002 Bali bombings, including "the Osama of Southeast Asia," will finally get their day in court on Monday, 15 years after being incarcerated at the U.S. military prison in Guantánamo Bay, Cuba.

Indonesian officials had indicated in 2016 that if Hambali were to be released, they would be reluctant to accept his repatriation for fear that his return could spark a revival among domestic terror cells.
By most accounts, this will be the first time that American media see the trio of detainees — two Malaysians and an Indonesian — since they were sent to the infamous lock-up. One analyst said their trial would only refresh allegations of the abuse and torture at Gitmo and reflect poorly on Washington, especially so soon after the Taliban
...Arabic for students...
took over again in Afghanistan.

Continued from Page 2



Still, the proceedings will cast a spotlight back to the 2002-2003 Bali and Jakarta bombings — which left a total of 214 people dead. Because, as the front man for the Office of Military Commissions explained, the prosecution will read out terror charges against the three suspects who will be in the courtroom.

"The defendants haven’t been seen in years, except by their lawyers," front man Ron Flesvig told BenarNews, referring to Indonesian national and alleged criminal mastermind of the Bali bombings, Hambali
...real name Riduan Isamuddin, close personal friend of Osama bin Laden, one of the founders of Jemaah Islamiyah and the planner of the 2002 Bali bombings. He was captured with the help of a mid-Eastern intel service, shipped to Guantanamo to rot but he'll likely be released eventually because that was a long time ago and we were all so much younger then...
, and the two Malaysians.

At this arraignment hearing, the three accused are supposed to enter a plea — that is, guilty or not guilty — but an accused can defer entering a plea as well, if the judge allows it, he said.

"The accused can also waive their right to hearing the charges, but the prosecution will still read them the charges," Flesvig said.

The charges include conspiracy — prosecutors allege that the accused conspired with al-Qaeda leader the late Osama bin Laden
...... who is now neither a strong horse nor a weak horse, but a dead horse......
and others to commit terrorist attacks across Southeast Asia and elsewhere. Hambali is said to have met Osama in 1996 in Afghanistan, the U.S. says.

Hambali, whose real name is Encep Nurjaman, was arrested in Thailand in August 2003 with Malaysians Mohammad Nazir Lep and Mohd Farik Bin Amin. They were sent to a secret CIA prison network before being moved to the prison at Guantanamo Bay in September 2006.

The Indonesian, who is called "Southeast Asia’s Osama," faces eight terror charges related to the Bali bombings, while the two Malaysians face nine. The charges do not carry the death penalty
.

HAMBALI IS ‘VERY SMART, CREATIVE AND CHARISMATIC’
The start of this trial of the Bali bombing suspects couldn’t have come at a worse time for Indonesia and Malaysia, according to Zachary Abuza, a Southeast Asian security expert and professor at the National War College in Washington.

The Taliban takeover of Afghanistan may energize holy warriors in Southeast Asia and if Hambali was sent back to Indonesia — depending on how he pleads — Jakarta "does not want that headache," Abuza said.

The Indonesian suspect Hambali was an operational criminal mastermind for Jemaah Islamiyah (JI), a Southeast Asian Death Eater group affiliated with al-Qaeda, the U.S. says.

And JI has been seeing a resurgence in Indonesia, Abuza said.

"They are nervous about the growth of JI — when you put the operations chief of JI back in the country that is something that will motivate the [militant] community," Abuza told BenarNews.

"The idea of another person who stood up and was treated horrifically by the Americans is a potential windfall for Death Eaters. He [Hambali] is a poster child for perseverance in fighting the great infidel," he said, referring to the treatment of detainees at Gitmo.

Nasir Abbas, a former JI member in Indonesia, agrees with Abuza.

Hambali is "a very smart, creative and charismatic person, so people are easily influenced by him," Nasir, who now works with police in deradicalization efforts, told BenarNews.

"He has managed to survive in Guantanamo all this time. ... As you know, it’s not easy being a prisoner at Guantanamo. It is a credit point for him in the eyes of the jihadists."

Nasir said that he knew Hambali when both were training at the military academy in Afghanistan. The U.S. says Hambali fought against Soviet forces in Afghanistan as well in 1986-1987.

US CASE AGAINST ACCUSED A ‘NIGHTMARE’
Indonesian officials had indicated in 2016 that if Hambali were to be released, they would be reluctant to accept his repatriation for fear that his return could spark a revival among domestic terror cells.

It appears they still feel the same way.

When BenarNews asked about the prospects for Hambali’s trial, Teuku Faizasyah, the front man for Indonesia’s foreign ministry, claimed the suspect was not Indonesian.

As for Malaysia, they "have been bracing for this" moment, Abuza said.

"The 2 Malaysians [in Gitmo] remain true believers and are very committed ... they are really hardcore," said Abuza, citing information he got from Malaysian officials who traveled to Gitmo and met the accused.

"Malaysia has been watching this and assumes the Americans will do something."

Malaysia’s counterterror police chief, Normah Ishak, reiterated what she said back in January: that the trial would give the accused an opportunity to defend themselves.

When asked whether the two Malaysians should come back home, she did not answer "yes" or "no."

All she told BenarNews was that "as Malaysians, they have the right to return home."

Abuza said he was aghast when a court date was first mentioned in January.

"I was sure that a plea bargain had been reached.... how will America come out of this looking good?" he said.

According to the analyst, who is a regular contributor to BenarNews, the case against the three is a "nightmare" from a legal perspective. Any information that came from interrogating the accused is dubious, he said, because of the Gitmo torture allegations.

"Which is why I was so convinced there would be some sort of agreement where Hambali pleads guilty to some charges and is returned to Indonesia, perhaps with a sentence of time served."
Posted by trailing wife 2021-08-29 00:25|| || Front Page|| [14 views ]  Top
 File under: al-Qaeda 

#1 When asked whether the two Malaysians should come back home, she did not answer "yes" or "no."

"Magic 8-Ball says: 'It is uncertain'"
Posted by Frank G 2021-08-29 06:14||   2021-08-29 06:14|| Front Page Top

13:07 Throlush Dark Lord of the Nebraskans2736
13:01 Throlush Dark Lord of the Nebraskans2736
12:59 mossomo
12:55 Super Hose
12:54 Super Hose
12:54 mossomo
12:50 Super Hose
12:47 746
12:45 Super Hose
12:42 mossomo
12:41 Super Hose
12:38 mossomo
12:37 mossomo
12:23 mossomo
12:21 Skidmark
12:18 Angealing+B.+Hayes4677
12:18 Skidmark
12:14 Skidmark
12:13 Skidmark
12:05 EMS Artifact
12:01 Super Hose
11:58 Super Hose
11:58 Super Hose
11:44 Grom the Reflective









Paypal:
Google
Search WWW Search rantburg.com