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  1. #1
    Thailand Expat misskit's Avatar
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    Defunct terror group JI tours to urge ex-members to surrender, stand down

    Former senior leaders of now-defunct terror group Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) held a gathering in Bekasi, a satellite town of Jakarta, urging their former comrades to stand down, turn themselves in and contribute to peace and economic development in Indonesia.
    Speaking via videoconference, Abu Rusdan, a former JI leader arrested in 2021, told a packed room of about 400 former members on Sept 8: “Go ahead, turn yourself in. If you have any arms, surrender them (to the authorities). You will not be detained.”


    His appeal was part of a nationwide outreach tour aimed at ensuring that former JI members do not regroup or join existing splinter groups, following the June dissolution of the terror group that was responsible for the 2002 Bali bombings.

    Similar gatherings were previously held in other places such as Yogyakarta, Jambi on the western island of Sumatra, and West Nusa Tenggara province capital Mataram, according to the former JI leaders who organised the meeting with the support of Indonesia’s national police counter-terrorism squad, Detachment 88.


    Police said on Sept 8 that all former JI members who turn themselves in will still be prosecuted according to their involvement, but would be given special consideration.


    “Until now, there is no fatwa that says that Indonesia is taghut (the worship of false gods or idols, instead of Allah), and therefore must be attacked,” said Rusdan, speaking while still imprisoned at the police headquarters detention facility in the capital.


    Rusdan, who was a JI chief between 2004 and 2007, also said that such beliefs had all this time been wrongly based on inaccurate teachings passed down for generations.


    Senior JI leaders had announced the group’s dissolution at a June 30 event.


    In a video recording of that meeting, Rusdan had said that JI’s senior council and the leaders of the group’s affiliated Islamic boarding schools had “agreed to declare the dissolution of JI and return to Indonesia’s embrace”.


    He made the statement alongside other key figures, including former JI chief Para Wijayanto, one of the most wanted terrorists in Southeast Asia, who was arrested in 2019 for recruiting militants and raising funds for terrorist organisations in Syria. The two are still serving time.


    JI evolved from the Indonesian militant movement Darul Islam – established before the country’s independence in 1945 – into an organisation with links to Islamist militant organisation Al-Qaeda.


    Formed in 1993 by Indonesian clerics Abdullah Sungkar and Abu Bakar Bashir, JI – the Southeast Asian affiliate of Al-Qaeda – wanted to establish a conservative Islamic state in the region. Abdullah died in 1999.


    The group was outlawed in 2008 after deadly attacks in the Philippines and Indonesia, including the bombings on the holiday island of Bali in 2002 that killed more than 200 people, many of them Australian tourists.


    A concerted security crackdown and the authorities’ vigilance have since weakened JI, which has not staged a major attack in more than a decade.


    Among the former members at the Sept 8 gathering was Yudi Anto, 42, from Cibitung in West Java province, who agreed with the decision to disband JI. He had joined the group 10 years ago.


    He, like many others there, had travelled from nearby satellite towns, including Bogor and Depok, to attend the event on the border of the capital.


    “We, jemaah (the congregation), must bring about manfaat (benefits) to the society,” Yudi told The Straits Times, adding that perhaps members could still remain in contact and find a new moral purpose that veers away from past terror activities.


    Similarly, Maman Suherman from Banten province, who had been with JI for seven years, was supportive of the group’s dissolution, saying he would follow the direction of the former leaders. His reason is that Islam teaches its followers to respect and follow their leaders.


    But the decision to disband has not been an easy pill to swallow for some, according to anecdotes shared with ST.


    Some long-term JI members who had made extreme sacrifices, such as leaving their families for long periods to go into hiding or to carry out assignments, said they had needed some time to warm up to the news of dissolution.


    Abu Fatih, another former JI leader, said there are those who have not supported dissolution, including one person in West Nusa Tenggara province.


    “We consider them as those being left behind, and who have not absorbed new information and thinking. We are confident they will one day support dissolution,” said Fatih.


    Also speaking via video call from prison, Wijayanto told attendees of the approach they needed to take to deal with the group’s problematic past.


    “If we have an aching tooth, we see a dentist to have the cavity filled, but if the problem persists, we pull out the teeth so it won’t create any more problems. We eliminate it,” he said.


    Defunct terror group JI tours to urge ex-members to surrender, stand down

  2. #2
    Thailand Expat DrWilly's Avatar
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    Plenty others to fill the void.

  3. #3
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    The Indonesian population of 280m is approximately 90% Muslim. Excluding hard line radical followers such as Aceh, it seems to me that the majority of that number are moderate members of the Islamic faith.
    In my experience, they believe in, and follow their faith, but they still have room for a live and let live attitude.

    This so called terror group seems to be an aging element of the more radical followers of Islam. The positive view might suggest the futility of such organisations, but as Willy points out, the hard liner, potential terrorists still exist.
    I have no idea what, if any, concessions have been granted to this group, but I do have experience of living among the silent majority of moderate members of that faith.
    Yes I am optimistic, but that is born of experience and knowledge gained by living amongst them.
    Philosophy is questions that may never be answered. Religion is answers that may never be questioned.

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