International Crisis Group
6 September 2010 

Illicit Arms in Indonesia


Asia Briefing N°109 6 Sep 2010

OVERVIEW

A bloody bank robbery in Medan in August 2010 and the discovery in Aceh in 
February 2010 of a terrorist training camp using old police weapons have 
focused public attention on the circulation of illegal arms in Indonesia. These 
incidents raise questions about how firearms fall into criminal hands and what 
measures are in place to stop them. The issue has become more urgent as the 
small groups of Indonesian jihadis, concerned about Muslim casualties in bomb 
attacks, are starting to discuss targeted killings as a preferred method of 
operation.

The Indonesian government could begin to address the problem by reviewing and 
strengthening compliance with procedures for storage, inventory and disposal of 
firearms; improved vetting and monitoring of those guarding armouries; auditing 
of gun importers and gun shops, including those that sell weapons online; and 
paying more attention to the growing popularity of “airsoft” guns that look 
exactly like real ones but shoot plastic pellets.

The problem needs to be kept in perspective, however. It is worth addressing 
precisely because the scale is manageable. Indonesia does not have a “gun 
culture” like the Philippines or Thailand. The number of people killed by 
terrorist gunfire in Indonesia over the last decade is about twenty, more than 
half of them police, and most of the deaths took place in post-conflict central 
Sulawesi and Maluku. The nexus between terrorism and crime is not nearly as 
strong as in other countries. There have been a few cases of bartering ganja 
(marijuana) for guns – and one case of trading endangered anteaters – but in 
general, narco-terrorism is not a problem.

Jihadi use of armed robberies as a fund-raising method is a more serious issue, 
with banks, gold stores and ATMs the favourite targets. As of this writing it 
remained unclear who was behind the Medan robbery – although criminal thugs 
remain the strongest possibility – but jihadi groups have robbed Medan banks 
before, most notably the Lippo Bank in 2003. Such crimes constitute a miniscule 
proportion of the country’s robberies, but it is still worth looking at where 
the guns come from when they occur. The problem may increase as the larger 
jihadi groups weaken and split, particularly those that once depended on member 
contributions for financing day-to-day activities. Recruitment by jihadis of 
ordinary criminals in prisons may also strengthen the linkage between terrorism 
and crime in the future.

There are four main sources of illegal guns in Indonesia. They can be stolen or 
illegally purchased from security forces, taken from leftover stockpiles in 
former conflict areas, manufactured by local gunsmiths or smuggled from abroad. 
Thousands of guns acquired legally but later rendered illicit through lapsed 
permits have become a growing concern because no one has kept track of them. 
Throughout the country, corruption facilitates the circulation of illegal arms 
in different ways and undermines what on paper is a tight system of regulation.

Jakarta/Brussels, 6 September 2010 

http://www.crisisgroup.org/en/regions/asia/south-east-asia/indonesia/B109-illicit-arms-in-indonesia.aspx


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