Category: Agama

  • World’s First ‘Halal’ Whisky Goes on Sale

    World’s First ‘Halal’ Whisky Goes on Sale

    Scottish whisky manufacturers are in disagreement over an ‘alcohol free’ product, which is going to be the first of its kind to hit the market.

    ArKay-Halal-Whisky

    The whisky brand ArKay is said to have an exceptional taste of whisky without the ‘alcohol content.’

    It is also being promoted as ideal for teetollars or those worried about drinking and driving.

    More importantly, the new product has a possibility of huge sales around the world in Muslim countries and in the Middle East as it has been declared as Halal certified, reported Daily Mail.

    However, the Scotch Whisky Association’s spokesperson said ‘it is not possible to make alcohol-free whisky.’

    ‘This company is trying to exploit whisky’s reputation with highly irresponsible marketing,’ added the spokesperson.

    Real Scotch whisky is a simple creation of water and barley, which grows well in the cool climate and summer rains that are common north of the border.

    Source: Tribune Online Report

  • The Expanding Halal Economic Pie

    The Expanding Halal Economic Pie

    Sixty million yen (S$700,000) and six months: that’s what TFK Corporation recently spent on renovating a kitchen in Tokyo’s busy Narita airport and preparing it for halal certification.

    The prize for its pains? A chance to grab a bigger slice of the lucrative and burgeoning Muslim travel market.

    TFK, the Japanese unit of Singapore inflight food catering group Sats, had been supplying halal meals to the Narita Airport Authority for transit passengers since December.

    But it had done so without halal certification, which provides an added layer of reassurance for Muslim diners.

    Muslims now represent nearly a quarter of the world’s seven billion people, and the value of Muslim tourism globally is expected to balloon to US$192 billion (S$245 billion) by 2020, from US$126 billion last year, according to figures cited by TFK.

    Yet many countries that Muslims are eager to visit may not have offerings that can meet their needs, such as prayer rooms and halal food options.

    More than two-thirds of Muslims travelling overseas for leisure say their most important requirement is halal food, noted TFK president Makoto Fukada.

    “As Muslim visitors to Japan are expected to reach one million a year by 2020 – tripling the 2013 level – the availability of certified halal food will be of great importance to meet the needs of these travellers,” Mr Fukada added.

    The potential of the global Muslim tourism industry has not gone unnoticed in Singapore, where companies can capitalise on their familiarity with Muslim customs to tap these opportunities.

    One such firm is CrescentRating, which caters to Muslim travel needs. It was set up in 2008 when founder Fazal Bahardeen noticed a lack of such services while on business trips for his former job at a multinational firm.

    Mr Fazal, 51, decided to strike out on his own to educate the hospitality industry about the “huge opportunity” in the Muslim travel market and to help Muslim travellers make educated choices.

    CrescentRating offers research, consultancy and training services on Muslim travel. It also issues reports on the global industry and has created a rating system for the “halal friendliness” of travel and hospitality services, based on their availability of halal food and prayer information, among other things.

    Last year, Mr Fazal launched travel website HalalTrip to help Muslim travellers put together a comprehensive itinerary – including flights, hotels and tour packages – for their needs.

    “There are three key outbound Muslim travel markets in this space: the Gulf countries, Southeast Asia and Western Europe,” he told The Straits Times.

    Tourists from these areas are keen to visit countries that may not be familiar with Muslim traditions, such as Japan and South Korea, he added.

    More Muslims are holidaying in Japan these days after visa rules were recently relaxed for tourists from countries including Malaysia and Thailand. Japan is also planning to do away with visa requirements for Indonesian tourists.

    Singaporean Raudaa Razak, a Muslim who works in Tokyo teaching English, said she quickly realised the lack of halal food outlets when she recently moved to the country. For one thing, most Japanese eateries serve alcohol, making it impossible for them to obtain halal certification, she said.

    Singapore firms can aid countries like Japan in understanding and meeting Muslim travel requirements, said trade agency IE Singapore, which helped Mr Fazal gain a foothold in Japan and clinch a consultancy project with the Fukuoka government.

    Describing Muslim travellers as “the largest under-served niche market for the tourism industry”, IE Singapore’s regional director for North Asia Pacific, Mr Lee Hoi Leong, said multi- ethnic Singapore has “an innate capability to cater to the lifestyle of the Muslim community in a Muslim-minority country”.

    It also helps that Singapore’s halal certification, established in 1978, builds trust in halal food products, Mr Lee said.

    TFK’s halal certification was awarded by Warees Halal, a division of Warees Investments, which in turn is wholly owned by the Islamic Religious Council of Singapore (Muis).

    “In such a large economy like Japan, Warees Halal can empower Muslims globally to continue to keep up with their lifestyle,” said Mr Zaini Osman, chief executive officer of Warees Investments.

    He said Warees Halal also aims to be a “springboard for more Singaporean Muslim or halal certified companies to venture into such economies”.

    By: Fiona Chan

    Source: business.asiaone.com

  • Mufti on “Selfies” During the Hajj

    Mufti on “Selfies” During the Hajj

    AMALAN memetik gambar secara sendiri atau ‘selfie’ semasa menunaikan ibadah haji tidak banyak berbeza daripada amalan terdahulu apabila jemaah meminta orang lain mengambil gambar dengan kamera semasa mereka di Masjidil Haram atau Masjid Nabawi, kata Mufti Dr Mohamed Fatris Bakaram.

    Namun amalan itu boleh berubah menjadi tidak baik sekiranya niat jemaah itu hanya untuk menunjuk-menunjuk atau tindakan jemaah mengambil ‘selfie’ mengganggu kekhusyukan ibadah orang lain.

    “Saya rasa ‘selfie’ seperti apa sahaja perbuatan yang dilakukan seorang insan adalah bergantung kepada tujuan, cara dan kesan.

    “Sesuatu benda yang baik asalnya boleh berubah menjadi tidak baik. Mungkin kerana tujuannya tidak betul, atau pun tujuannya betul, caranya tidak betul. Ataupun tujuan betul, cara tidak kena. Ataupun tujuan betul tetapi caranya tidak mengambil kira kesannya yang akan berlaku selepas itu.

    “Begitu juga dengan ‘selfie’. Bagi saya sebagai seorang manusia, dari segi teknikalnya ia tiada beza dengan kita ambil gambar (dengan kamera), kita minta orang lain petikan. Pada waktu itu belum ada selfie stick. Belum ada monopad.

    “Malah di Masjidil Haram selama ini, kita biasa lihat orang lain ambil gambar, sahaja tidak boleh ambil gambar sendiri,” kata Dr Fatris sewaktu dialog sempena Peraduan Esei Cabaran Mufti 2014, kelmarin.

    Demam ‘selfie’ yang “menjangkiti” jemaah dan pengunjung Masjidil Haram dan Masjid Nabawi sebelum ini mengundang kontroversi.

    Ulama terkenal dari Jeddah, Sheikh Abdul Razzaq Al-Badr, menasihatkan jemaah haji agar tidak melakukan ‘selfie’ semasa sedang beribadah, sebaliknya menunaikan segala manasik haji dengan sempurna.

    Katanya, Allah memerintahkan jemaah haji supaya menunaikan ibadah tanpa riak dan tidak menghebahkan kepada orang ramai.

    Menjelaskan lebih lanjut, Dr Fatris berkata:

    “Terpulang kepada niatnya. Jika niatnya untuk menunjuk-menunjuk… Wah! Orang kampung tengok, orang Choa Chu Kang tengok kita pergi haji buat ibadah. Boleh rosak amalan itu. Dan jika kita buat amalan itu hingga mengganggu kekhusyukkkan ibadah orang lain, berlebihan, ia tidak wajar.

    “Jika niat tak ada masalah, kita buat cara yang betul, tetapi kita tidak memikirkan kesannya kepada orang lain. Perbuatan itu menjadi percakapan. Orang boleh timbulkan isu itu daripada gambar yang diambil jika kita tidak hati-hati.

    “Bagi saya, dari segi hukum, bergantung tiga faktor dalam apa-apa juga isu – Tujuan. Cara. Kesan.

    “Benda yang baik insya-Allah tidak akan berubah menjadi benda yang tidak baik tetapi kita perlu berhati-hati,” jelas Dr Fatris lagi.

    Source: beritaharian.sg/setempat

  • Muslim Stereotypes: Untruths and Generalisations

    Muslim Stereotypes: Untruths and Generalisations

    5 things idiots believe about Muslims which just aren’t true…

    Posted on October 20, 2014 by hugowaters

    Let me lay my cards on the table. I am not a religious person. I don’t discount all faiths in their entirety, but I wouldn’t say I believe in enough of any of the mainstream religions to even lean towards one in particular. I do however respect people’s religious beliefs, whilst also myself believing that religion shouldn’t be beyond question or criticism. This article isn’t about me somehow glorifying Islam or putting it’s teachings beyond question. It is about leveling the playing field so we don’t discriminate against the faith significantly more than we do with others. There is a growing consensus that the more liberal-thinking people are wrongly pandering to some sort of Islamic lobby, and in that sense we are aiding a kind of Fox News, Daily Mail Special Addition of The Armageddon. I have been called a ‘traitor’ (and much worse) many times for simply challenging ignorant and bigoted views about Muslims. This article is simply about how when people use the term Muslim in such a broad way, it is not only extremely discriminatory, but also quite simply, stupid.

    1. Female Genital Mutilation is a Muslim problem

    Before we delve into this first point, as I mentioned before, no religion is beyond question, and I’m quite comfortable in making the assertion that all religions are male-dominated. They all still have a very long way to come, both in their views of women in society in general, and also the role of women within the faiths themselves. But it is beyond question that when it comes to discrimination against women, Islam is seen as being way out on its own in not only its views and attitudes towards women, but its treatment of them too.

    The number one worst lie in this respect (and believe me there is a big list) is the portrayal of Female Genital Mutilation (or FGM) being a ‘Muslim problem.’ Now for those who don’t know, this barbaric practice involves babies having an incision (also described as circumcision) without any anesthetic, which essentially removes the clitoris. The deluded reasoning behind the practice is that by removing the clitoris the child will remain pure. Now before we go into facts and figures, there is absolutely nothing in the Quran about FGM. This alone should be enough to prevent people being able to call it a Muslim problem – how can it be when there is nothing in it’s teachings about it? But let’s go further, nowhere in Muslim majority states does this practice occur, apart from in isolated parts of Central Africa. It doesn’t happen anywhere in the Middle East, it doesn’t happen anywhere in North Africa, and it doesn’t happen anywhere in Asia. Furthermore, staying in the same region of Africa, did you know that Ethiopia has a 75% rate of FGM amongst it’s population, and that it’s a Christian majority country? Did you also know that Eritrea has almost 90% of FGM, and again, it is a Christian country? FGM can therefore more accurately described as a regional problem. Consequently, if it only occurs in nations within the same cluster of central Africa, it can quite justifiably be labelled a central African problem. Along with the Quran there is nothing in The Bible about the practice, so the two religions cannot legitimately be brought into the argument. It is a good example of people doing something in-spite of their religion, not because of it. But regardless, I hear of the issue being a ‘Muslim problem’ almost every time there is a debate on it. This is a prime example of the media portraying something to push an agenda, which sadly a large portion of the general public lap-up without question.

    2. Muslim Societies Don’t Advocate Equal Rights

    Again, equal rights for women is lacking in pretty much every part of the world. But as with the previous point, Muslim women seem to be used as the example of an unequal society. The driving ban for women in Saudi Arabia is the main course in the long set-menu of accusations seemingly attributed only to Muslim majority countries. People are very quick to forget that Saudi Arabia is the only country in the world to have such a ban. In fact there is no doubt that the most extreme country when it comes to equality is Saudi Arabia, which is all the more bizarre when you consider that Saudi Arabia is the US and UK’s closest ally in the region. When people talk about how double standards by The West harm its relationship within the Middle East as a whole, it’s not a myth, the reputation is earned by our politicians criticising human rights violations, equality issues, and democracy/dictatorship in the poorer countries in the region, whilst simultaneously having friendly relationships with an oil-rich country in Saudi Arabia who have by far the worst rights for women, zero tolerance for other religions, and not only do they not have any elections, the country is named after the family that rule it and probably always will be. Did you know for example that in the month following The West’s offensive against ISIS that Saudi Arabia beheaded 19 people? 19 people in 4 weeks. No-one knows what they did, and they definitely don’t seem interested in finding out or telling anyone about it either. Of course ISIS is a problem, but it’s the blatant hypocrisy of going to war (and literally flooding the news with nothing else in the process) against a group of people you could fit into an averagely sized football stadium while perpetuating a myth that it’s really against some sort of Islamic ideology that all 1.6 billion of the worlds Muslims believe in, in addition to selling the most extreme nation our weapons is what gives our leaders in The West a bad rap, and deservedly so.

    Using the driving ban in Saudi Arabia as leverage against all Muslims worldwide would be the equivalent of using Uganda’s anti-gay laws – which currently advocate homosexuals being hunted down by the authorities, beaten freely, and sentenced to 12 years in jail, as leverage against Christianity. With Uganda being an 84% Christian country and the majority of the population lobbying to go even further and allow the death penalty to be used as the punishment for homosexuality, not once was the fact that they were a Christian country even brought up. Yet in stark contrast, stoning in Iran and the driving ban in Saudi Arabia are very much thought of as Muslim problems. The anti-gay law in Uganda is a Ugandan problem, stoning in Iran is an Iranian problem, the driving ban in Saudi Arabia is a Saudi Arabian problem. At best these points can be described as regional problems, as with the FGM point above, but how can they be classed as Christian or Muslim problems if the overwhelming majority of people within the faiths don’t do it?

    Within Indonesia, the world’s largest Muslim majority state with a population of 250 million, females have exactly the same rights as males, which I definitely wouldn’t say is represented in our media’s portrayal of the faith. But we’ll get onto how facts like these can be conveniently disregarded later in the article.

    A few more facts about women’s equality in what people would describe as the Muslim world:

    While the USA is still waiting for its first female president – did you know that Muslim majority countries have elected 7 female head of states in the last 50 years? In fact, continuing with politics, it’s also worth mentioning that the USA only has 18% of women currently elected to run and serve their country – that’s even less than Saudi Arabia, driving ban and all, who at 19.9% only started allowing women to even be elected a year ago. Further still that’s even less again than Pakistan, another nation who need to come a long way in regards to gender equality but somehow further beat the US at 20.7%. Like I’ve said, by no means am I saying that women in Pakistan or Saudi Arabia have a sweet deal, in fact I feel very comfortable in stating that women’s rights in those two particular countries leave a hell of a lot to be desired. So the fact that they have more women involved in their governments than the USA is particularly scorning at a time when extreme measures are being taken worldwide to increase female participation in politics.

    3. Most Muslims are Arabs

    One of the main reasons the issues above are misunderstood by so many people is that large parts of Western society believe that all or most Muslims are of Arabic origin and only live in the Middle East. When people are negatively ranting about Muslims they are usually referring to people in Middle Eastern countries, particularly the troubled spots they hear about on the news virtually all day, every day. States that often have hugely complex issues where frankly outside antagonists from both Western countries, along with China and Russia do not help. But all that aside it’s staggering to think that there are actually more Muslims living in Malaysia and Indonesia, countries which are both in Asia, than the whole of the Middle East and North Africa combined. In fact some may find it surprising that only around 25% of the worlds Muslims actually live in that particular region. About the same (if not slightly more) of the worlds Christians live on the African continent. Regardless of this, when people are talking about Christians I doubt the image they have in their mind is of a native Malawian, Ugandan, or Zimbabwean. The truth is that no other faith is so crudely generalised as the Muslim faith. Whenever atrocities occur in the Middle East, we always hear of how the ‘Muslim world’ or ‘Muslim Community’ needs come out and distance themselves or even apologise for the acts. Why would leading clerics or politicians in largely peaceful countries such as Malaysia, Turkey, Bangladesh, or Indonesia have to apologise for something that has happened in a competely different country by people with which they have virtually nothing in common with. The paradoxical equivalent that the Christian leaders in the UK would have needed to come out to apologise for Anders Breivik’s terrorist attacks in Norway sounds completely insane, and it is. The fact that the majority of the world’s Muslims live in the far east, in more secular countries which don’t advocate extremism, is a massive inconvenience for the media. It is so easy to get the general public on side if they project the idea of some sort of global religious war, one where a whole religion is actively setting out to eradicate other faiths and non-believers. I know it’s easy because I know so many people who genuinely believe that it is happening. The people I’m talking about aren’t exclusively made up of those paranoid delusional social media users who continue to baffle me with each comment on news feeds or Facebook posts. They are people I know in my personal life. But my question to them is: if you know that the idea you have in your head of what a Muslim is cannot possibly be correct, how can you continue to be so bigoted and make such outrageously ignorant statements about them?

    4. “Most Muslims are Terrorists”

    Some of this has been covered in the previous section but I’d like to explore just the terrorism part alone, together with some facts and figures. Our media is often quite rightly accused of scaremongering, and excessively flooding pages and air-time with exaggerated fear about terrorism. Fear, in-particularly related to race, religion or immigration satisfies their agenda in diverting the general public’s attention away from the very real economic situation we are in – an aspect of society which unsurprisingly large parts of the mainstream media and leaders in the country have a vested interest in. An exaggerated media predictably leads to a large proportion of the general public being so wide of the mark and misinformed in their understanding of some really important issues. We hear regularly from Fox News anchors and Daily Mail journalists that around 10% of Muslims are terrorists. Predictably a lot of the general public estimate the figure to be significantly higher. We hear 20%, 30%, or in some cases the numerical system is seemingly discounted all together and ‘most’ Muslims are branded as terrorists (presumably the non-figure of ‘most’ implies that the number has to be greater than 50%) which is simply ludicrous, but there’s no doubt that we’ve all seen or heard it. Now even just using the 10% figure, which I would say is very much on the conservative side of what many people (particularly those I’m aiming this piece at) genuinely think: 10% of 1.6 billion is obviously 160 million. If there was 160 million Islamic Terrorists in the world as a group they would equal more than ten times the amount of active members of the US Army, which in itself is the second biggest armed forces in the world, and the biggest in the Western World by a huge margin. Logically the figure has to be inaccurate, or as mentioned there would most definitely be more than 20 to 30 thousand members of ISIS. Again, I’m not saying ISIS aren’t a problem, but the group equate to approximately 0.002% of the world’s Muslims, so if you therefore feel comfortable labeling them a Muslim problem then you have been well and truly reeled in, and you most certainly are one of the people to whom I’d be asking the question which concluded my last topic. Now I know that ISIS aren’t standing alone in the arena of Islamic terrorism, but using a generally excepted definition of the word terrorist i.e. someone who uses violence or terror to advance political gains, there can’t possibly be 160 million active Islamic terrorists in the world, especially bearing in mind that there are only 315 million Muslims living in the whole of the Middle East and North Africa. Given that this is the region we are told to be most worried about, and that this would falsely imply that over half of the entire population of Muslims in the region are terrorists (a part of the world comprised of approximately 22 different countries, many of whom are our allies) then no wonder people are worried. You see when the right-wing media outlets in The West report on Muslims, they don’t mean those in Indonesia, or Malaysia, or Bangladesh, or Turkey. It’s simply much easier to pretend that these countries don’t exist, as they are a total contradiction to their constant propaganda that Muslim majority countries can’t be moderate or secular. Even further, and I don’t apologise for stressing the point again, the fact that these countries also far outnumber the population of Muslim majority countries in the Middle East, it is absolutely scandalous that they are allowed to just disregard such a huge proportion of the faith they almost continually report on.

    5. Only The Quran Promotes Extremism

    One of the easiest and quickest methods right-wingers use to get Joe-public on their side (a tactic I’ve seen used very frequently by groups such as the English Defence League, and the British National Party) is quoting passages out of The Quran in isolation. We hear of how Islam, through the teachings in The Quran, is condoning the killing of non-believers as well as encouraging the stoning of women for adultery, amongst other things. This next bit is easy, here are some of the values promoted in The Bible, do please click on the links to be taken to the full passage:

    – Kill people for working Sundays: Exodus 31:12-15
    – Kill Homosexuals: Leviticus 20:13
    – Kill people for swearing at parents: Leviticus 20:9
    – Kill non-believers: 2 Chronicles 15:12-13
    – Kill women who are not virgins on their wedding night: Deuteronomy 22:20-21

    (I should add that this was all found after only searching for about 5 minutes)

    In Conclusion

    The whole label of ‘Islamic Extremism’ simply cannot be applied to all Muslims if it obviously isn’t true. Sure some Muslim majority countries have issues with religious extremism, but that is their problem, not Islam as a whole’s problem. When you describe the fictional idea of ‘The Muslim World’ what you are essentially doing is grouping together 1.6 billion people made up of different races and nationalities, who live on different continents, who have different cultures, histories, economies, wealth, living standards, practices, who enjoy different art and music, and you are lumping them all together as if they are all the same. You are suggesting that Turkey is the same as Saudi Arabia, that Malaysia is the same as Iran. It just simply isn’t true. In contrast you would struggle to even get a general Christian consensus between those within the faith in the United States and United Kingdom, let alone than with others in Russia (where recent polling suggests Christianity is at 65%), Uganda, Zimbabwe, Mexico, or any other of the Christian majority nations. If it is virtually impossible to define what a globally accepted form of Christianity would look like, why are we so quick to presume that we can do it with Islam?

    As I said at the start, I’m not for or against any religion. But what I am against is singling-out one particular religion as being significantly worse than the others, when in reality that just simply isn’t true. Couple this with the fact that the reasons for perpetuating such a myth are so blatantly corrupt. It essentially pushes an agenda that is undoubtedly going against many of the people’s values who have been reeled in. That, my friends is the real problem. There will always be a far-right, and there will always be racism. But when it’s sane, reasonable people who are being warped into believing that a whole race or religion can be classed as a problem that needs a solution, well, we all know where that belief takes you don’t we…

    If you agree with the points in this article then please follow @Hugo_Waters on Twitter

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    Source: hugowaters.com/2014/10/20/5-things-idiots-believe-about-muslims-which-arent-true/

  • At Least Two Singaporeans Went to Syria to Join ISIS

    At Least Two Singaporeans Went to Syria to Join ISIS

    SINGAPORE: The escalation of violence in Syria and Iraq over the last three months, as well as the expansion of the Islamic State (IS) threat beyond the two countries’ borders, have raised the security threat posed to Singapore. Two Ministers took turns to address concerns raised by Members of Parliament on Tuesday (Oct 7).

    Deputy Prime Minister and Home Affairs Minister Teo Chee Hean shared the Government’s assessment of the situation, while Foreign Affairs Minister, K Shanmugam said that countering the terrorism threat has to ultimately be “in the arena of ideas”.

    COUNTERING EXTREMIST IDEOLOGY

    Mr Shanmugam said as many as 15,000 people from about 80 countries could have joined IS and other radical groups fighting in Syria and Iraq. This is the largest mobilisation of foreign fighters since the Soviet-Afghan war in the 1980s – the conflict that ultimately created the Al Qaeda terrorist network.

    This region is not immune to the threat, with many joining in the fight in Syria and Iraq, he said. To combat the threat, Mr Shanmugam raised three points.

    Firstly, international solidarity and action will send a strong signal to the IS that the world has rejected its extremist agenda.

    Secondly, IS in both Iraq and Syria must be dealt with as one entity. He said any overall strategy must include a political solution to end the conflict in Syria, and political will to develop an inclusive and tolerant government in Iraq.

    Lastly, military force alone will not be enough. “Military force is necessary to blunt IS on the ground but missiles and rockets alone cannot and will not bring peace,” said Mr Shanmugam. “This brings me to my third point – the true fight has to be in the arena of ideas. We have to counter the extremist ideology which is used to recruit foreigners to terrorism and fuel their violent agenda.”

    He added that the threat posed by IS was real and everyone must do their part to combat global terrorism.

    THE THREAT TO SINGAPORE

    Mr Teo elaborated on the threat of the IS closer to home. IS continues to actively recruit foreign fighters – including Southeast Asians – and its brutality is not confined to beheadings of Westerners, but also to the killing of other Muslims and minority communities in Syria and Iraq, Mr Teo told Parliament.

    A United States-led coalition of more than 40 countries, including several Arab states, is now taking counter-action against IS, he added.

    “We currently have no information of any specific threat to us resulting directly from beheadings of IS and the anti-IS strikes,” Mr Teo said. “However, our assessment remains that the expansion of the IS threat beyond Syria and Iraq has raised the threat not only to countries who are part of the US-led coalition but also to Singapore.”

    As with the threat from Al-Qaeda, he said, “even if Singapore is not itself a target, foreign interests here may be targeted. This House may recall that Al Qaeda, working with the Jemaah Islamiyah Group, had planned to bomb the US and other embassies in Singapore in 2002”.

    There are also reports that some Malaysians and Indonesians who have fought for IS have formed a militant group called Katibah Nusantara Lid Daulah Islamiyyah, or Malay Archipelago Unit for the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria.

    “If this group expands in Southeast Asia, it will pose a regional terrorism threat like the JI terrorist network, which had also aimed to set up a Southeast Asian Islamic Archipelago that encompassed Singapore, through the use of violence and terrorism,” Mr Teo said.

    LOCAL SECURITY MEASURES IN PLACE

    The DPM said Singapore’s security agencies are working with its security partners to monitor the situation in Syria and Iraq closely though the exchange of information, and will cooperate with them to counter the threat posed by foreign terrorists to Singapore.

    There are also measures to prevent Singaporeans from getting involved in the violence there or from carrying out activities in support of IS, he said, such as co-sponsoring the UN Security Council resolution on foreign terrorist fighters.

    “Any Singaporean who assists, supports, promotes or joins violent organisations like IS would have demonstrated a dangerous tendency to support the use of violence. Such a person poses a real threat to Singapore’s national security, and will be dealt with in accordance with our laws,” he said.

    “Our approach will be carefully calibrated to the specifics of each case. Where necessary, the Internal Security Act (ISA) will be used in order to pre-empt and neutralise these terrorism threats to the security of our citizens and our country.”

    In response to a question by Workers’ Party MP Low Thia Khiang, Mr Teo said that there are at least two known Singapore citizens who have gone to Syria to take part in the fight, though their exact whereabouts are unknown.

    He added that authorities will continue to investigate anyone who expresses support for terrorism or an interest to pursue violence.

    LOCAL COMMUNITY HAS PART TO PLAY 

    The Deputy Prime Minister also called on everyone to play a part in protecting Singapore against the terrorism threat. This includes alerting the authorities early to prevent family and friends from becoming radicalised.

    There are also various community initiatives to counter IS’ radical rhetoric, he noted. The Religious Rehabilitation Group, for example, plans to produce online videos to debunk IS’ ideology to better reach out to Internet-savvy youths who are most at risk of being radicalised via social media, he said.

    Mr Teo also mentioned a meeting was organised in July, with various community leaders, for them to understand what the Muslim community is doing to counter the threat.

    “The threat is always there, but it’s something which we have to continue to work hard together, to bring people together, and help them understand the problem, and that our Muslim community is taking proactive and real steps to deal with this issue,” he said.

    “All members of the public can also play their part by being alert to suspicious persons, objects and activities. A timely call to the authorities could well save many innocent lives. By working together, we can make Singapore a safer place for everyone,” Mr Teo added.

    Source: http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/singapore/rise-of-islamic-state/1401872.html