*https://asiatimes.com/southeast-asia/indonesia/
<https://asiatimes.com/southeast-asia/indonesia/> *

*ISIS eyes Covid-19 weakness in Indonesia*

Terror group’s Indonesian affiliates appear to be answering the call to
exploit the health crisis for extremist purposes

*By **JOHN MCBETH* <https://asiatimes.com/author/john-mcbeth/>MAY 6, 2020

A Muslim man wears a headband showing the Islamic State group's symbol
during a protest in the eastern Indonesian city of Surabaya in a 2014 file
photo. Photo: Facebook

JAKARTA – With battered Islamic State (ISIS) urging its followers to take
advantage of the Covid-19 pandemic’s disruption and launch renewed attacks
around the world, Indonesian counter-terrorism police have seized a
startling amount of ammunition in raids at opposite ends of Java.

Terrorism experts say the 2,300 rounds of ammunition, all of it for assault
rifles and other service weapons used by the police and military, is the
most Indonesian militants are known to have had in their possession in
almost two decades.

Three suspects allegedly belonging to the ISIS-linked Jamaah Ansharut
Daulah (JAD) were arrested on April 26 by the Detachment 88
counterterrorism unit in the Surabaya suburb of Sidoarjo, along with 288
rounds of 5.56 mm and 9 mm ammunition.

Also seized in the raid was a camouflaged Pindad-made SSI-V4 sniper rifle,
normally carried by specialized elements of Army Strategic Reserve
(Kostrad) raider battalions, and two 9 mm Browning automatic pistols.

A day later, following a trail left by employees of a Surabaya-based
courier company, police captured three more militants and reportedly found
an additional 2,000 rounds of ammunition near the Banten province capital
of Serang, west of Jakarta.

The second arms seizure has received little media coverage, which suggests
official sensitivity over a possible leakage from Pindad itself, or from a
unit within the Indonesian Armed Forces (TNI).  A former air force
servicemen is among the detainees.

In an unrelated incident in southern Central Kalimantan, a new sanctuary
for fugitive militants, local police arrested a man who was tracked by
street cameras after planting a home-made bomb in a mosque.

A government worker removes ISIS flags painted on walls near Veteran Street
in Surakarta City, Indonesia, in a file photo. Photo: AFP Forum/Agoes
Rudianto

Police are saying little about what might have been planned for the
weaponry, but as one security source told Asia Times: “It’s very
disturbing. They have to get to the bottom of it. It’s not that easy to get
ammunition in that quantity without someone missing it.”



The only clear sign of Indonesian militants heeding the ISIS call to arms
is in Central Sulawesi, where Mujahideen of Eastern Indonesia (MIT)
extremists have recently lost five followers in jungle clashes with
security forces around Poso, the provincial capital.

“The arrival of the virus gave MIT new hope that victory was near,” said
Institute for Policy Analysis of Conflict (IPAC) director Sidney Jones,
pointing to new recruits joining the small, rag-tag band that can still
call on some local support.

Otherwise, the level of terrorist activity has been generally low. Jones
noted in a recent briefing paper that some ISIS supporters are less focused
on jihad operations and more on how the virus may be yet another sign that
the end of the world is near, a strange new preoccupation with Indonesian
extremists.

Mainstream Islamists have showed little inclination to exploit social
unrest associated with sharp increases in unemployment, and an up-tick in
anti-Chinese rhetoric among hardliners on social media has not been matched
by any trouble on the streets.



Still, past experience has shown that terrorists strike when they are least
expected to and, in the past, have often have only been thwarted at the
last minute by Detachment 88 operatives.

Last June, police arrested 34 suspects in Central Kalimantan for allegedly
planning a suicide bombing in Jakarta. Some were members of JAD who fled
Java in 2018 after trying to establish a training camp on the jungled
slopes of Mount Salak, 90 kilometers south of Jakarta.

Indonesian anti-terror police from Detachment 88 stand guard near explosive
materials and other evidence confiscated in raids on suspected militants in
a 2016 file photo. Image: Facebook

Detachment 88 has only recently been taken over by Major General Marthinus
Hukom, 48, one of the original 2002 Bali bombing investigators and a member
of the counterterrorism unit since it was formed in the wake of the
country’s worst terrorist outrage.

Hukom was previously part of the unit’s intelligence arm and is reputed to
have a highly tuned understanding of how JAD and other home-grown terrorist
networks operate, mostly communicating through different groups on social
media.

One of those arrested in the Banten operation was reportedly related to
Serang-born Imam Samudra, executed along with two other militants on the
prison island of Nusa Kambangan in November 2008 for his leading role in
the Bali bombing.

The scene of the Banten operation was the bustling, devoutly-Islamic
market town of Pandeglang, where former chief security minister Wiranto was
stabbed in the stomach by a knife-wielding militant last October as he
arrived for an official function.

Wiranto survived, but it was the first attack on a Cabinet minister in
recent memory and raised concerns that JAD might be targeting senior
figures in President Joko Widodo’s administration. The recent arms seizures
have renewed those worries.

Banten was previously part of West Java, the country’s most populous
province and the cradle of the Darul Islam movement which fought an
abortive low-level insurgency in the 1950s to turn Indonesia into an
Islamic state.

Currently the bastion of the Islamic-based Justice and Prosperity Party
(PKS), the only opposition party in Parliament, western Java has handed
Widodo crushing defeats in two successive elections, although he regained
much of that ground in Central and East Java.

Indonesian ISIS members in Syria. Photo: Facebook

JAD was responsible for the 2016 bomb and gun attack in downtown Jakarta
that left eight people dead, as well as the May 2018 suicide bombing of
three churches and a police station in Surabaya which killed 15 bystanders
and 13 of the bombers.

Up to now, the organization is not known to have any expertise in the use
of automatic weapons. A group of militants was meant to have received
training on the southern Philippines island of Basilan in 2016, but it was
cut short by a military operation.

After that, ISIS fighters were too busy preparing for the armed occupation
of Marawi city further north in Mindanao’s Lanao del Sur province, which
erupted in May 2017 and raged on for five months, killing 978 militants and
168 Philippine government soldiers.

Since then, IPAC’s Jones says a chapter of misfortunes has stymied repeated
efforts by JAD to import thirty M-16 and AK-47 rifles from southern
Mindanao, which the organization has already paid for and are reportedly
being kept in Zamboanga.

One of the earlier attempts to move the weaponry was through the Indonesian
island of Kalimantan, across the Sulu Sea from’ Zamboangaon the south end
of Mindanao. But the firebombing of a church in the East Kalimantan capital
of Samarinda, which killed a small child, gave authorities cause to roll up
the local ISIS network.

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