http://www.asiasentinel.com/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=4820&Itemid=202

      Bombs and bombast in Indonesia        
      Written by A Lin Neuman     
      Friday, 14 September 2012  
        
             
            They managed to just get themselves  
      Inept bombers may not be so inept next time

      It was a sobering week on the terrorist front. An accidental blast at an 
“orphanage” in the Jakarta suburb of Depok in last Saturday had a bit of a 
slapstick feel to it initially: inept terrorists do everybody a favor and blow 
themselves up before they do any real harm. 

      The Depok case, however, proved to be a lot more interesting than first 
thought. Authorities quickly said the house was being used as a staging area 
for serious attacks. Coordinating Minister for Political and Security Affairs 
Djoko Suyanto said the location was “used to store [explosive] materials and 
for assembly.”

      Then some misguided soul named Muhammad Toriq walked into a West Jakarta 
police station wearing what was described by police as a “suicide bomb belt” 
and gave himself up. He had been planning to blow up police targets or perhaps 
a Buddhist center to avenge the treatment of Rohingya Muslims in Myanmar. 

      He had been part of the terror crowd in Depok and fled the scene after 
his compatriots blew the place up, police said. “We thank him for 
surrendering,” National Police spokesman Brig. Gen. Boy Rafli Amar, said on 
Monday in a statement that sounded a bit friendly to my foreign ears (on second 
thought, I guess its OK to thank Toriq for not pulling the trigger on that 
vest).

      Then there was the sad spectacle of those 100 or so protesters outside 
the US Embassy on Tuesday, the 11th anniversary of the 9/11 attacks on the 
World Trade Center and the Pentagon.

      This group carried signs saying “We are all Osama” under a picture of the 
late Osama bin Laden. They paraded around spouting utter idiocy like “Democracy 
brings oppression” and saying that the 9/11 murderers died defending fellow 
Muslims in Palestine from US oppression. 

      In recent years, we have grown used to thinking that Indonesia is on an 
inevitable rise to greatness. If we build enough shopping malls, schools, 
airports and the rest, the country will be unstoppable. Indeed, a lot of the 
good news is certainly true. But we also know how much damage one attack — like 
Bali in 2002 or the twin hotel blasts in 2009 — can do to the nation’s image. 

      Depok and that demonstration — some of whose participants identified 
themselves with Jemaah Anshorut Tauhid, which has been labeled a terrorist 
group — are sobering reminders that the lunatics are still among us. Indeed, 
where is the dividing line between people who put on the suicide vest and those 
like the Islamic Defenders Front and others who spout vicious religious 
rhetoric, attack minorities and take violent actions to impose their views with 
impunity? 

      It can be almost impossible in the current climate to know where rhetoric 
stops and terrorist action begins. There have been increasing numbers of 
attacks on police in the last year and warnings from security officials that 
hard-line groups — which no longer have any central command — may seek 
high-profile corruptors as targets in a bid for public sympathy. 

      The police have done an admirable job of rolling up the leaders of the 
Jemaah Islamiyah terror network in recent years. But those who spread radical 
ideas, call for Jihad, seek to undermine the tolerant traditions of the nation 
and lure the unbalanced to seek glory by killing the innocent are still out 
there. 

      Indonesia is headed in the right direction economically. But the country 
needs more leaders who are committed to countering the lunatics at the idea 
stage, who will stand up and proclaim unwavering support for the rule of law in 
the face of intolerance because unknown numbers of people get stirred up by the 
hateful rhetoric still being openly promulgated. 

      “They are out there,” said a security expert I spoke to about the state 
of the terrorist threat. “And it is harder and harder to predict what they will 
do. It’s all incredibly messy.” 

      (A Lin Neumann is one of the founders of Asia Sentinel. He wrote this for 
the Jakarta Globe.)
     


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