http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/home/terrorists-still-lurking-in-indonesia-police-warn/386325

July 17, 2010 
Farouk Arnaz & Heru Andriyanto

 
Convicted terrorist Mohammad Jibriel Abdul Rahman, center, raises his fist as 
he shouts "Allahu akbar" (God is great) after his trial at a district court in 
Jakarta recently. On the anniversary of the twin hotel bombings in Jakarta last 
year, senior anti-terror police are warning that regional terror group Jemaah 
Islamiyah still has the ability to regenerate. (AP Photo/Irwin Fedriansyah)

Terrorists Still Lurking in Indonesia, Police Warn


Despite police successes against terrorist networks, lessons learned over the 
12 months since the July 17 twin hotel bombings in Jakarta show that the 
shadowy terrorist group Jemaah Islamiyah has the capacity to keep on 
regenerating, according to a top counterterrorism official. 

Brig. Gen. Tito Karnavian, head of the National Police's counterterrorism unit, 
says the group, also known as JI, appears to be never short of followers, 
despite having been the target of nationwide manhunts since the 2002 Bali 
bombings, and has adapted by changing its attack strategy. 

"We have learned that JI has survived and started a new cell," Tito told the 
Jakarta Globe in an exclusive interview this week. "Noordin M Top was capable 
of setting a well-planned attack. The bombings also revealed a role played by 
the Al-Ghuroba cell." 

Al-Ghuroba is a group comprising Indonesian students who have studied at 
fundamentalist schools in Pakistan. Its key members include Abdul Rohim, the 
son of influential cleric Abu Bakar Bashir; Muhammad Jibriel, the son of 
radical preacher Abu Jibriel; and Gun-Gun Rusman Gunawan, the younger brother 
of Hambali, who is being detained by US authorities on terror charges. 

In a recent report, the International Crisis Group, a global security watchdog, 
identified followers of the Bashir-led Jamaah Ansharut Tauhid as a key 
challenge for Indonesian law enforcers. 

"The far bigger challenge for Indonesia is to manage the aspirations of the 
thousands who join JAT rallies for its public message: That democracy is 
antithetical to Islam, that only an Islamic state can uphold the faith and that 
Islamic law must be the source of all justice," the ICG said. 

JAT's Jakarta headquarters was raided by police in May and several members were 
charged with funding a paramilitary training camp uncovered in Aceh in 
February. 

Tito also said that police learned that terrorists were expanding their scope 
from Western targets to "nearby enemies." 

"What I mean by nearby enemies are the Indonesian government, Indonesian 
Military and National Police, which they regard as representatives of a secular 
regime and supporters of Western democracy," he said. 

"They were also preparing a series of attacks, instead of a single attack in 
one year. In addition to the July 17 bombings, they were preparing a car-bomb 
attack on the president," Tito said, adding the plot against the president was 
uncovered after a raid in Jati Asih, Bekasi, several weeks after the hotel 
bombings. 

Although trials are under way for most of the bombing suspects, Tito said three 
more suspects arrested in Medan in April were still to be prosecuted. Sources 
at the police have said the three Medan suspects are Deni Suramto, who 
allegedly bought the explosives for the hotel attacks; Bayu Sena, the suspected 
bomb maker; and Pandu Wicaksono. 

Tito said other key militants were also being sought. "Among them is Mustofa, 
alias Abu Tholut. He is the most senior member we know after the Aceh terrorist 
network was uncovered," he said. 

Mustofa was arrested in Semarang for illegal possession of firearms in July 
2003. He was sentenced to seven years in jail but walked free under a 
conditional release in March 2009. 

"The road before us is still long and they will continue to regenerate," Tito 
said.




Related articles
One Year After Indonesia Terrorist Attacks, Has Justice Been Served?
10:27 PM 16/07/2010


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