RI intelligence set up group in 1970s now accused of terrorism, report says
RI intelligence set up group in 1970s now accused of terrorism, report says
Agencies, Jakarta
While the West tries to find ways to help prevent Islamic
terrorism from escalating in Southeast Asia, a new report
suggests that such militancy has long been stoked by one force
that the United States now wants extinguish it - Indonesia's
military.
The report, released by the International Crisis Group, a
Brussels, Belgium-based think tank, says that Jemaah Islamiyah -
a shadowy group allegedly trying to topple governments in
Southeast Asia and carve out an Islamic state - was created in
the 1970s by the head of Indonesia's military intelligence.
The goal was to compromise Muslim opponents of then-dictator
Soeharto and to depict them as fundamentalists, the document
said.
"If you scratch any radical Islamic group in Indonesia, you
will find some security forces involvement," Sidney Jones, the
International Crisis Group country director, said Monday. "These
links need further investigation."
The report's release could embarrass the Bush administration,
which has made renewing links with Indonesia's military - cut
three years ago because of human rights abuses - a centerpiece of
its anti-terror strategy in Southeast Asia.
It comes after accusations by former President Abdurrahman
Wahid that Laskar Jihad, another extremist organization accused
of killing thousands of Christians in the Maluku islands, was set
up by hard-line generals opposed to democratic reforms after
Suharto's fall in 1999.
U.S. President George W. Bush's administration has been
looking for ways to re-establish military ties with Indonesia.
The effort, spearheaded by U.S. Deputy Defense Secretary Paul
Wolfowitz - a former ambassador to Indonesia during the Suharto
regime - gained momentum after Sept. 11, amid fears Indonesia
could become a haven for the al-Qaida terrorist network.
This week, the United States Pacific fleet commander Adm.
Thomas B. Fargo is due in Jakarta to discuss a dlrs 50 million
aid package announced by Secretary of State Colin Powell during
an Aug. 2 visit.
Jemaah Islamiyah, which authorities in Malaysia and Singapore
claim has links to al-Qaida, is also accused of plotting to bomb
U.S. targets in Singapore. Dozens of alleged members have been
arrested in Malaysia and Singapore, but not in Indonesia.
Jemaah Islamiyah has its roots in the Darul Islam rebellion in
Indonesia in the 1950s which sought to transform Indonesia into
an Islamic state, according to the International Crisis Group
report. The uprising collapsed in the early 1960s.
In 1966, Gen. Suharto seized power in Indonesia. By the 1970s,
Suharto had become concerned about the opposition groups' growing
popularity and set about to discredit them, the report said.
In a sting operation, Suharto's intelligence chief Gen. Ali
Murtopo persuaded former Darul Islam members to reactivate
themselves, ostensibly to prevent communist infiltration. When
they did so in 1977, the security forces arrested 185 activists
and accused them of seeking to establish a fundamentalist state.
The name Jemaah Islamiyah first surfaced in court documents as
the organization the activists thought they were setting up at
Murtopo's behest.
Most activists were released in the 1980s, and some -
radicalized by their experience in prison - organized to fight
the dictatorship. These included Abu Bakar Bashir, a Muslim
cleric now accused by Singapore of being Jemaah Islamiyah's
ringleader.
Jones said senior Indonesian military officials retained close
ties to the group at least through the 1980s.
With Suharto's overthrow in 1998 after massive pro-democracy
protests, the brutal repression of political rivals that
characterized his dictatorship ceased.
But Jones warned that Jakarta was now under international
pressure to re-institute arbitrary measures against Bashir and
his followers, who deny links to al-Qaida.
She said imprisoning suspects without trial or using torture
to extract confessions would backfire and transform them into
national heroes.
Meanwhile, U.S. Ambassador to Indonesia Ralph L. Boyce said in
Yogyakarta on Tuesday that he found Muslims in Indonesia did not
encourage violence.
After his visit to a Islamic boarding school in Pabelan,
Magelang, Central Java, on Monday, he said he found the school
very open to modernity and far from being radical.
His arrival was even welcomed by the school's female marching
band, playing Stairway to Heaven by British rock group Led
Zeppelin.
"I think this is the best antidote for fanaticism or
radicalism. It's a good education," he said.