Tag: Indonesia

  • Indonesian Student Arrested For Sending Bomb Threats To SIA

    Indonesian Student Arrested For Sending Bomb Threats To SIA

    JAKARTA — Jakarta Police today (July 8) said they had arrested a 21-year-old male student from a private university in Banten who had sent a bomb threat to Singapore Airlines, causing flight delays.

    Ilham, a senior college student reportedly majoring in information technology, was apprehended yesterday at his home in the Baleria housing complex in Tangerang, Banten after sending an email containing a bomb threat to Singapore Airlines on July 1.

    “Because of the terror, there were three flights (from Singapore’s Changi International Airport), delayed for a while,” said Brigadier General Victor Edison Simanjuntak, chief of Jakarta Police’s economic crime unit, today.

    According to Brig Gen Victor, Singaporean authorities tracked the source of the email and contacted the Indonesian police force.

    The information technology and cybercrime unit of the National Police conducted an investigation that led to Ilham’s arrest.

    “We are still investigating his motives,” Brig Gen Victor said.

    The police intend to charge Ilham with article 335 of the criminal code and article 45 of the 2008 Law on Information and Electronic Transactions. The student faces a maximum ten years’ imprisonment.

    When contacted, Singapore Airlines told TODAY: “As the matter is the subject of an ongoing police investigation, we are unable to provide further details.”

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Tsunami Miracle Boy Now With Sporting Lisbon Youth Academy

    Tsunami Miracle Boy Now With Sporting Lisbon Youth Academy

    Portuguese club Sporting Lisbon have just unveiled a new player in their academy.

    And the story of Martunis will melt your heart.

    Eleven years ago, a severely dehydrated Martunis, about seven at the time, was found stranded on a beach.

    He had been swept away when the Boxing Day tsunami, which claimed more than 230,000 lives in 14 countries, devastated Aceh, Indonesia.

    But he managed to survive.

    For about three weeks he was on his own and ate instant noodles that he found and drank water from puddles.

    Brink of death

    When discovered by journalists, he was on the brink of death — and wearing a No 10 Portugal national team jersey bearing the name of Portuguese legend Rui Costa.

    The image and story of the miracle boy immediately made headlines around the world, and touched the Portuguese football community deeply.

    So the Portuguese FA, helped by superstar Cristiano Ronaldo’s fund-raising efforts, rebuilt his home.

    Martunis’ mother and two brothers perished in the disaster, but he was reunited with his father Sarbini.

    Ronaldo was so moved that he also met the boy a few times, most recently in 2013.

    Martunis, whose ambition is to become a professional footballer, now has a chance to follow in the footsteps of his Portuguese idols at Sporting’s famous academy, where players such as Ronaldo himself, Nani and Luis Figo were groomed.

    Forward

    A check on the Internet showed that Martunis used to play as a forward for PSAP Siglis, a second-tier club in Indonesia.

    At his presentation in Lisbon, he said: “It’s great to be here, this club makes my dream possible.

    “I am incredibly excited about this opportunity. Viva Sporting!”

    Sporting president Bruno de Carvalho said: “Martunis will work at the academy. We will work with him also in his development as a human being and as a man.”

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Foster Mother A Suspect In Bali Murder

    Foster Mother A Suspect In Bali Murder

    JAKARTA – Bali police have named the adoptive mother a suspect in the brutal murder of an eight-year-old girl last month, in a case that has gripped Indonesia.

    Margriet Christine Megawe, who has already been named a suspect for child neglect, was yesterday accused of involvement in the killing of her adopted daughter, Engeline Megawe.

    “For the time being, Megawe is the main suspect,” Bali’s police chief, Inspector-General Ronny Franky Sompie, said.

    He said the decision was based on evidence presented by expert witnesses from the Sanglah General Hospital in Denpasar, Bali police’s forensic laboratory and the National Police.

    Police said earlier that they used the latest technology to identify fingerprints on the body in order to identify the suspected killer.

    “That (technology) is for revealing the identity from their fingerprints,” said the head of the National Police Fingerprints Identification System Centre, Brigadier-General Bekti Suhartono, Antara news agency reported last week.

    Police said yesterday that they would be questioning Megawe again yesterday and today to find the motive.

    A former domestic helper at Megawe’s home, Agustinus “Agus” Tai Hamdamai, told the police during interrogation last week that Engeline had been murdered by Megawe in her room on May 16.

    He said he heard Engeline shouting to Megawe to let her go, a few minutes before he was called to her bedroom. He saw the girl lying on the floor lifeless, Tempo news reported on Sunday.

    Agustinus, himself a suspect in the case, claimed that Megawe ordered him to bury Engeline’s body in the garden, and that she had promised him 200 million rupiah (S$20,000) for doing so.

    Police found Engeline’s body in the garden on June 10.

    She was last seen playing in front of her adoptive mother’s house in Sanur in Denpasar, Bali. The family had reported her missing, leading to a frantic public search.

    Engeline’s biological mother, Madam Hamidah, who was from East Java, was distraught upon seeing her child’s body at Sanglah General Hospital last week.

    “Who killed you, child? Why were you killed? Your mother cannot accept that you are treated like that,” she was quoted as saying by kompas.com.

    “Mr Policeman, go and capture the killer of my daughter, sir. Sentence them to death,” she said.

    A relative of the victim – named only as Mr Supri – said Engeline was adopted by Megawe when she was three days old.

    Madam Hamidah was prohibited from meeting her daughter after the adoption based on an agreement between her and Megawe, he said.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • ISIS Targeting Indonesia

    ISIS Targeting Indonesia

    Indonesia may be declared the next Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) province, said terrorism expert Professor Rohan Gunaratna.

    And when an area is declared a “province”, resources including foreign fighters move in and join local groups to impose ISIS’ will – this includes its vision of a caliphate.

    ISIS leader Abu Bakar Al-Baghdadi had earlier declared only areas in and around the Middle East such as Sinai, Libya, Iraq, Saudi Arabia and Yemen as “provinces”.

    Prof Gunaratna of the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS) said: “There is a misperception that the IS (another name for ISIS) threat is Syria- and Iraq-centric.

    “IS is going beyond its core area. It is sprinting while some governments are trying to play catch-up.”

    He said there are already several different groups affiliated to ISIS in South-east Asia. (See map on facing page.)

    And last year, Malaysian security authorities said four new terror groups were planning to create an Islamic caliphate to rule parts of South-east Asia, including Singapore.

    They planned to call it Daulah Islamiah Nusantara and it covers Singapore, Malaysia, Indonesia, southern Thailand and southern Philippines.

    All this makes it clear that ISIS’ aim is not just getting the self-radicalised – like M. Arifil Azim Putra Norja’i, the 19-year-old student who had planned to kill President Tony Tan Keng Yam and Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong – to push its agenda.

    The big prize is Indonesia as a “province”, and exerting its influence in South-east Asia.

    WHAT PROOF IS THERE THAT ISIS IS REACHING INTO INDONESIA?

    Foreign fighters, including four Uighur men from Xinjiang province in China, were arrested in Indonesia last year.

    There are about 400 Uighurs in Syria fighting for ISIS.

    Then there is Santoso, an ambitious, if somewhat inexperienced Indonesian terrorist, as described in an April report by Indonesia-based Institute for Policy Analysis of Conflict (IPAC).

    In 2014, Santoso, head of East Indonesia Mujahedeen (MIT), pledged allegiance to ISIS leader Al-Baghdadi.

    He also gave himself the name Abu Musab Al-Zarqawi Al-Indunesi. Abu Musab Al-Zarqawi is the founding father of ISIS, who was killed by the US in 2006.

    Santoso had pushed for Poso in Sulawesi to be an IS “province”.

    Until recently, Al-Baghdadi ignored regions outside of the Middle East.

    But earlier this year, he declared South Asia as an IS “province”, a significant shift.

    Describing Santoso as “the greatest threat”, Prof Gunaratna said ISIS now has a global vision and is looking to link up with groups around the world.

    ISIS is reaching out to conflict zones in Indonesia and the Philippines and will hijack issues like the expulsion of the Rohingya people, he added,

    The four Uighur men had been trying to reach Santoso after a failed attempt to make it to Syria.

    HOW BIG A THREAT IS NETWORK IN POSO?

    A number of terrorists in Indonesia belonging to Jemaah Islamiah (JI) were killed and captured after the 2002 Bali bombing which claimed 202 lives.

    But in 2009, a group under Abu Bakar Bashir, the emir of JI, formed a branch in Poso. The group reached out to former fighters, said Ms Navhat Nuraniyah, an associate research fellow at RSIS.

    She told The New Paper the old network was revived and MIT was formed with Santoso as its leader. MIT’s military camp has been running in Poso since 2011.

    “Poso has a long history. It dates back to 1998 when a sectarian conflict broke out between Muslims and Christians,” said Ms Navhat.

    “JI and other jihadist groups first mobilised their fighters to defend Muslims there, and they subsequently used it as a training ground.”

    She added that MIT has carried out small-scale attacks in Poso including a botched suicide bombing and may not be a sophisticated group yet.

    “However, IS gave them a new purpose and the situation could change if their members or former students come back from Syria or Iraq,” she said.

    They already have the funds.

    In 2011, one of Santoso’s supporters, IT expert Rizki Gunawan, hacked a multi-level marketing company website and stole 6 billion rupiah (S$606,000).

    Part of the funds was said to have been used in a church bombing that year.

    WILL RETURNEES FROM SYRIA POSE THREAT?

    Official Indonesian sources say there are about 50 Indonesians fighting in Syria. Australian media has been reporting the figure as closer to 300.

    Prof Gunaratna said that like the experience in Afghanistan, returnees will have even greater resolve coupled with battlefield experience.

    In February, militants, believed to be returnees, were suspected to have been behind an attempted chlorine bomb attack at a shopping mall in south Jakarta.

    Indonesian police said it was the first such attack ever attempted in Indonesia and that it resembled tactics employed by ISIS in Syria and Iraq.

    Besides combat experience and deepened ideological commitment, IPAC’s director Sidney Jones reportedly said in March that returnees will also have international connections and legitimacy that could provide leadership for the terrorism network.


    Poso (in Sulawesi) has a long history. It dates back to 1998 when a sectarian conflict broke out between Muslims and Christians. JI and other jihadist groups first mobilised their fighters to defend Muslims there, and they subsequently used it as a training ground.

    – Ms Navhat Nuraniyah, an associate research fellow at RSIS


    There is a misperception that the IS (another name for ISIS) threat is Syria- 
and Iraq-centric. IS is going beyond its core area. It is sprinting while some governments are trying to play catch-up.

    – Professor Rohan Gunaratna of the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies (RSIS)


    HOTLINE

    Anyone who knows or suspects that a person is radicalised should promptly call the ISD Counter-Terrorism

    Centre’s 24-hour helpline: 1800-2626-473 (1800-2626-ISD).

    Bali bombers’ connection

    Lamongan is a sleepy town about 50km from Surabaya, Indonesia’s second largest city. It was also the home of Bali bombers and brothers Amrozi, Mukhlas and Ali Imron.

    The tiny town’s connection to terrorism has been in the news recently.

    In March, two sisters-in-law from Lamongan were deported from Turkey with their children after trying to get to ISIS-controlled Syria.

    An April report published by the Indonesia-based Institute for Policy Analysis of Conflict (IPAC) said Lamongan’s extremist community was shaped by Jemaah Islamiah and its satellite school.

    Many of the attacks in Indonesia were planned or started in Lamongan, according to the IPAC report.

    The report said the Lamongan network also helped present Santoso’s MIT group as being a serious threat.

    MEDIA ARM

    The report added: “The key to this was providing Santoso with an effective media arm, and the Lamongan network did just this – connecting Santoso first with Al-Qaeda’s Global Islamic Media Front and then with ISIS.

    “The objective was to create the illusion, both internationally and at home, that the Indonesian effort was bigger and more significant than it really was.

    “The propagandists may have wanted international recognition for Indonesia’s home-grown jihad, but they wanted even more to persuade small-town recruits from other parts of Indonesia that Poso was a war worth fighting.”

    Over time, the Lamongan network has also provided recruiters, fighters and propagandists for ISIS.

    Following a series of crackdowns, many of the fighters ran to Poso and Santoso, making him Indonesia’s most wanted terrorist.

     

    Source: www.tnp.sg

  • Young Lions Crash Out After Defeat To Indonesia

    Young Lions Crash Out After Defeat To Indonesia

    Hosts Singapore crashed out of the football competition at the 28th SEA Games after losing to Indonesia in Group A on Thursday (Jun 11).

    After a goalless first half, the breakthrough came in the 47th minute when Evan Dimas Darmono scored with a stunning shot from inside the penalty box.

    Sahil Suhaimi almost equalised for Singapore a minute later when his header was palmed away by the Indonesian keeper after a curling cross from the left.

    Both teams kept up the tempo with chances at both ends. Indonesia almost doubled their lead in the 63rd minute when Ahmad Nufiandani’s shot forced Singapore goalkeeper Syazwan Buhari into a reflex save.

    To make matters worse for the hosts, Ho Wai Loon was sent off in the 64th minute for a second yellow card.

    Singapore coach Aide Iskandar resigned after the team’s failure but paid tribute to his charges. “I’m very proud of my boys, they gave their best and we pushed to get a goal or an equaliser even though we were one man down, that’s something that is really rare to see for a Singaporean side.”

    He added: “I appreciate all the support, even though some sections of fans were abusing us, some fans thanked the players during the game and even after the game. We showed a lot of unity and solidarity.”

    When asked why key players like Faris Ramli and Irfan Fandi Ahmad were left on the bench at the start of the game, he said that they were “not fully fit” and had to be dropped from the starting line-up.

    Aide’s Indonesian counterpart said although Singapore are a good side, their weaknesses were apparent. “We knew their weakness was distributing the ball,” said Santoso. “Singapore’s central defenders were a little bit slow, so I asked my players to make runs behind them.”

    He added: “A couple of players picked up injuries, but I hope they will be fine by tomorrow.”

    Indonesia will now play Thailand in the second semi-final on Saturday at 8.30pm. Vietnam and Myanmar kick-off at 2pm the same day. Both matches are at the National Stadium.

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com