http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2012/08/27/ngruki-group-link-with-terrorism-france.html

Ngruki group link with terrorism in France
Margareth S. Aritonang, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Headlines | Mon, August 27 
2012, 6:40 AM 

Paper Edition | Page: 1

 (Antara/Hasan Sakri Ghozali)

A terrorist network linked with Al-Mukmin (Ngruki) Islamic boarding school in 
Surakarta, Central Java, is suspected of being behind terrorism incidents in 
Paris and Toulouse, France, in March.

The National Counterterrorism Agency (BNPT) chairman Insp. Gen. (ret.) Ansyaad 
Mbai told The Jakarta Post on Sunday that the French police had informed the 
agency that three French nationals, including fugitive militant Frederic C. 
Jean Salvi, were planning to take shelter in Ngruki after the planned attacks. 

Salvi, according to Ansyaad, spent several years studying with Islamic 
militants in Indonesia, and is among the country’s most wanted fugitives. 

“We are watching the Ngruki boarding school closely and in constant touch with 
the French authorities. We are investigating how these three French citizens 
got in touch with the school and the purpose of their planned trips there,” 
Ansyaad said. 

Ngruki was founded by firebrand cleric Abu Bakar Ba’asyir, now serving 15 years 
in prison for organizing a terrorism training camp in Aceh. Many of the 
school’s graduates have been involved in terrorism, including the first Bali 
bombing in 2002 that claimed more than 200 lives, mostly foreign tourists. 

Salvi is suspected of links with the terrorist network responsible for the 
shooting that claimed seven lives in Toulouse, in March. Network member Mohamed 
Merah, 23, was shot dead by the French authorities during a raid. 

According to the BNPT, the group is involved in two separate incidents at the 
Indonesian Embassy in Paris. 

In the first incident in October 2004, a bomb exploded near the Embassy, 
injuring 10 people. 

In the second in March of this year, an explosion caused minor damage and no 
injuries. Security camera footage showed two people — one on a motorcycle, a 
second on a bicycle — pass by the embassy shortly before the explosion. 

The French police have thus far been unable to detain anyone responsible for 
the incidents. 

The BNPT announced Salvi’s alleged role in the embassy events after 
intercepting emails and online chats. The latest attack, the BNPT said, was 
meant to warn Indonesia to stop the US and Australia-funded security crackdown 
that has resulted in the arrest, conviction and imprisonment of hundreds of 
Muslims in recent years. 

Salvi has been on Indonesia’s most wanted list since 2010 and was first 
introduced to Ba’asyir by activists of Al Ghuroba, a study club for Indonesian 
students in Pakistan, Afghanistan and several Arabic countries. 

The spokesman for the Ngruki boarding school, and Ba’asyir’s youngest son, 
Abdurrachim, denied the BNPT allegations on the events in France. 

“The BNPT and other anti terror agencies have always campaigned negatively 
against our school just because we aim to enforce sharia in this country. They 
have no proof of what they accuse us for,” said Abdul “Iim” Rohim, also one of 
the founders of Al Ghuroba. 

However, he admitted the school had foreign visitors, including some from 
France, who were interested in studying there. “I condemn those who arbitrarily 
relate our foreign visitors to terrorism. We are open to outsiders. We do not 
prohibit them coming here. Even though we are attempting to uphold Sharia law 
here, it doesn’t mean that we will use all possible means, such as bombing, to 
reach our goal,” he said.


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