http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/lawandorder/ngos-call-on-govt-to-do-more-in-indonesias-fight-against-terror/531123?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=jgnewsletter

NGOs Call on Govt to Do More in Indonesia's Fight Against Terror
Ulma Haryanto | July 18, 2012



The government needs to do more to combat religious violence and improve prison 
management to better combat terrorism, the International Crisis Group said in 
its latest report released on Monday. 

Titled “How Indonesian Extremists Regroup,” the report looked into new 
alliances and networks in recent years since the break-up of a paramilitary 
training camp in Aceh by the country’s counterterrorism unit in early 2010. 

“Indonesian police have been good, but they have also been lucky that the 
capacity of these extremists has been so low,” Jim Della-Giacoma, the ICG’s 
Southeast Asia project director, said in a statement. 

The report mentioned at least 12 plots, which it said had been hatched since 
the camp was broken up. 

“Fortunately for Indonesia, most of these would-be terrorists have been 
singularly inept,” ICG senior adviser Sidney Jones said. “But there are signs 
that at least some are learning lessons from their mistakes and becoming more 
strategic in their thinking. The danger is not over.” 

One of the lessons that jihadi movements learned, according to the report, was 
to invest more time in dakwah, or religious outreach, and that they needed 
hard-line pro-Shariah advocacy groups such as the Islamic Defenders Front (FPI) 
as a base for community support. 

“The failure of the government to acknowledge, let alone address, the menace 
these groups pose to Indonesia’s social fabric is an invitation to more 
violence in the future,” the report said. 

The ICG also warned of growing extremism in places with high intolerance and 
religious violence but weak law enforcement, such as West Java. 

“It’s a place where the police have not been as active as they should be in 
arresting thugs who commit crimes of vandalism, assault and incitement against 
minorities in the name of anti-vice, anti-apostasy or anti-Christianization 
campaigns,” Jones said. 

“Allowing this kind of violence to go unpunished encourages extremism and 
allows it to grow.” 

The ICG recommends maximum sentences for vandalism, assault and threats of 
violence, as well as clear instructions to all officials, including government 
employees and police, to avoid interactions with groups or members of groups 
with a known history of such activity. 

The government also needs to work on strategies to reduce the influence of 
extremist clerics, including stricter control of hate speech, incitement and 
prohibition for institutions receiving government funding to host such 
teachings, it said. 

Prisons also became an area of concern since they are the location for 
“cross-organizational interaction.” 

The late Hilman Djayakusumah, a drug dealer who was shot to death in a police 
raid in Bali in March, was recruited by Imam Samudera in 2004 when both were 
inmates in the island’s Kerobokan prison. 

Hilman was allegedly plotting a third Bali bombing together with four others, 
of which two were also former inmates at Kerobokan in 2004. 

Lax monitoring of prison visits to jihadis have also been used by their friends 
and relatives to share information, keep networks together and even recruit new 
sympathizers, according to the report. 

“The penitentiary directorate of the government has so far failed to enforce a 
universal policy on its prisons regarding terrorist convicts,” Agus Nahrowi, 
program manager at Search for Common Ground, told the Globe. 

The international NGO runs programs for terrorist convicts in several prisons 
in the country. 

“In Cipinang [in East Jakarta], for instance, terrorist convicts are put in 
separate cells, but in other places they can mix with other criminals,” Agus 
said.

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke