http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2011/05/18/terror-fight-shifting-%E2%80%98pesantren%E2%80%99-campus.html

Terror fight shifting from 'pesantren' to campus

Nani Afrida, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta | Wed, 05/18/2011 7:00 AM | Headlines 

Indonesia may encounter different terrorist foes in the future as universities 
are increasingly turning into a fertile ground for breeding sympathizers of 
violence and intolerance. 

Hard-line organizations, including the outlawed Islamic State of Indonesia 
(NII) movement, the Islam Defenders Front (FPI), Jihadi and Ikhwanul Muslimin 
(IM) have expanded their clout and are now cajoling support from university 
students.

The trend is more alarming in the wake of official impotence in preventing the 
proliferation of radical teachings at the nation's institutes of higher 
learning. 

"Radicalism on campus has entered an alarming stage," National Anti-Terrorism 
Agency (BNPT) chief Ansyaad Mbai said recently. 

"We can only wait and see. We don't have any legal umbrella to stop radical 
movements on campus," he said. 

Ansyaad has every reason to worry. The recent distribution of book bombs to 
several noted figures in Jakarta and the attempted bombing of a church in 
Serpong, Banten, were the alleged handiwork of five university graduates.

The cases follow the conviction of two college students and one college 
graduate in August 2010 on terror-related charges.

The trio were sentenced to four years' imprisonment for harboring the men who 
organized the bombings of the J.W. Mariott and Ritz- Carlton hotels in Jakarta 
in 2009 that killed seven people and injured 50. 

Around two weeks ago, the police arrested two students from 11 Maret University 
(UNS) in Surakarta, Central Java, for their alleged role as master recruiters 
for the NII. 

"Terrorism is seemingly attracting an increasing number of creative and 
intellectual university graduates who differ from its stereotypical adherents 
of Islamic boarding school [pesantren] students and preachers," said Ansyaad.

Islamic studies expert Yon Machmudi of the University of Indonesa said that 
students might be easily lured into radical movements for several reasons, 
including a lack of critical thinking that should be nurtured at school and by 
families. 

"A student gets information mostly from the Internet. And they don't try to 
critically review the content," Yon said.

Terrorism expert Noor Huda Ismail, who is also the executive director of the 
Prasasti Perdamaian Foundation that facilitates rehabilitation efforts for 
terrorist-linked inmates, called on the government to immediately keep close 
watch over the nation's youth from being lured into radical movement. 

"The emergence of young radicals was in some part inspired by books from the 
Middle East promoting radicalism and widely circulated on radical websites and 
through hard-line publishing companies," he said.

Why students are vulnerable to radical recruitment

. Students are less critical.
. Some Islamic organizations operate informally and off campus, and are thus 
difficult to control. 
. Students tend to accept information from questionable sources on the 
Internet. 
. Students do not compare and contrast information sources, accepting only one 
point of view.
. Students live far from their families, making parental supervision and 
instruction in Islam's true nature difficult. 
. Indonesia has no regulations curbing radicalism on campus.

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



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