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Southeast Asia
New threat from JI splinter groups
2004-03-10
Malaysian and Indonesian security agencies have foiled a planned suicide bomb attack on Indonesia’s national police headquarters and uncovered new Islamic militant groups linked to the Jemaah Islamiah (JI), South-east Asia’s main terrorist network.

The breakthrough came in December, when Malaysian marine police intercepted a small boat off Sabah and detained eight suspected militants, Asia-based intelligence officials told the Asian Wall Street Journal.

Under interrogation last month, one of them, an Indonesian named Ahmad Said Maulana, said he was involved in a plot to drive an explosives-laden vehicle into the national police headquarters in Jakarta, said officials.

The attack was planned for early July to coincide with Indonesia’s national police day celebrations, the Journal reported.

Ahmad, now in custody in Malaysia, told his interrogators that he was a member of a previously unknown radical group called Republik Persatuan Islam Indonesia.

According to investigators, he said he had just completed training in bomb-making techniques at a clandestine camp in Mindanao, the site of a long-running Muslim rebellion in the southern Philippines.

The episode indicates that the Al-Qaeda-linked JI is breaking into smaller independent - and perhaps more bellicose - splinter groups.
Makes sense. JI looked to be fairly hierarchial in nature and the Indonesian coppers took most of it apart in short order. Hierarchial orgs generally fold fairly quickly unless there’s a whole lot of gunnies in stock. This looks like JI 2.0, adopting a more decentralized command structure.
’If this guy wasn’t caught, the attack would have taken place and we would have quickly jumped to the conclusion that it was Jemaah Islamiah,’ said a senior Asian intelligence official familiar with the investigation.

This new dimension of South-east Asia’s terrorist threat was highlighted last month in a report by Brussels-based International Crisis Group (ICG) on recent clashes between Muslims and Christians in remote areas of Indonesia.

While the creation of an Islamic state uniting Muslim South-east Asia remains an ultimate goal for the region’s militant groups, JI and the smaller Indonesia-based splinter groups differ in strategy.

The ICG suggested that most JI members favour the long-term strategy of building a mass base through the widespread preaching of Islamic militancy.

But the newer, smaller groups are more inclined to favour violent attacks on Christian, Western or government targets as prescribed by Al-Qaeda’s 1998 fatwa, or religious decree, encouraging attacks on Western targets.

Apart from Republik Persatuan Islam Indonesia, Indonesian security agencies are also monitoring the activities of another JI offshoot called Batalion Abu Bakar.

’Our initial findings show that these two groups are more dangerous than Jemaah Islamiah, so the likelihood of scattered attacks in Indonesia is there,’ said a senior Indonesian intelligence official.

Officials said members of the splinter organisations receive their training and arms from Philippine Muslim rebel groups in Mindanao.

The camp, they said, was operated by militants linked to the Moro Islamic Liberation Front (MILF), which is seeking Mindanao’s independence from the Philippines.

Yesterday, the Philippines also said it will send police teams to Malaysia and Indonesia to interrogate detained JI members about allegations that they trained with Filipino guerillas.

’We are banking on its (the MILF’s) commitment to help the government in the anti-terrorism drive, which both sides consider indispensable to the pursuit of long-lasting peace,’ AFP quoted presidential spokesman Ignacio Bunye as saying.
Posted by:Dan Darling

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