Tag: IS

  • Gadis Denmark Bertempur Lawan ISIS, Tapi Hadapi Hukuman Penjara

    Gadis Denmark Bertempur Lawan ISIS, Tapi Hadapi Hukuman Penjara

    DENMARK: Seorang gadis jelita warga Denmark, Joanna Palani, 23 tahun, kini menghadapi hukuman penjara enam bulan gara-gara berjuang bersama tentera Kurdi di Syria untuk melawan kumpulan pengganas ISIS.

    Menurut Daily Mail, pada 14 November 2014, Palani, yang berketurunan Kurdi, membuat perjalanan ke Syria dan menyertai YPG (Unit Perlindungan Rakyat Kurdi) dan kemudian Peshmerga, tentera terlatih Kurdi, untuk bertempur dengan para militan ISIS.

    Mahkamah Copenhagen City mengenakan dakwaan ke atas Palani kerana dia melanggar undang-undang Denmark yang melarang warganya menyertai ‘pertempuran asing’.

    Ironinya, gadis jelita itu berjuang untuk menentang kumpulan pengganas.

    Pemerintah Denmark sebelum ini melarang Palani daripada menjadi pejuang Kurdi. Bahkan tahun lalu, pasportnya dirampas oleh polis dan pihak perisikan Denmark (PET). Namun, Palani bertekad untuk memberikan jiwa raganya demi demokrasi, kemerdekaan dan hak asasi wanita.

    “Jika saya ditangkap atau tewas, saya akan tetap bangga atas apa yang saya perjuangkan,” kata Palani, yang berketurunan Kurdi.

    Undang-undang tentang pertempuran asing ditetapkan pemerintah Denmark untuk memperketatkan usaha anti-esktremisme dalam negara itu.

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

  • Study: Indonesian Jails Are Breeding Grounds For Terrorists

    Study: Indonesian Jails Are Breeding Grounds For Terrorists

    Prisons in Indonesia, notorious for being overpopulated and under- staffed, remain a fertile breeding ground for pro-ISIS militants, according to a new study.

    These structural problems within the prison system will continue to defeat efforts in deradicalisation, disengagement and rehabilitation, say analysts from the Institute for Policy Analysis of Conflict (Ipac) in a report released yesterday.

    As a result, inmates loyal to the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria are able to recruit and radicalise fellow prisoners with impunity, as well as direct attacks from behind bars, says the study by the Jakarta-based think-tank.

    “Prisons are overcrowded and understaffed, corruption is rife, and inadequate budgets make it easier for well-funded extremists to recruit inmates when they can offer extra food,” Ipac director Sidney Jones said yesterday.

    “No deradicalisation programme is going to be effective unless some of these issues are addressed.”

    There are more than 200,000 inmates in 477 correctional facilities across Indonesia, of which some 300 or more prisons and detention centres are overcrowded.

    The worst is a facility in Banjarmasin, South Kalimantan, which has more than six times its capacity, leading the warden to turn toilet areas into holding cells.

    Indonesia has about 16,500 prison officers, most of whom have not been adequately trained in areas including the handling of high-risk inmates. With these officers on different shifts in a day, only some 3,650 staff are on duty at any one time.

    This represents a ratio of about one officer to 55 inmates, making it almost impossible to closely monitor all prisoners, including 220 terrorist convicts.

    While the number of inmates in jail for terrorism-related activities is low relative to the total prison population, the stakes are far higher with these “high-risk” offenders.

    The risk is exacerbated with the rising number of terrorist convicts, with more than 120 jailed this year.

    The radicalisation of common criminals by pro-ISIS inmates in prison continues to be a nightmare for both the police and prison officials, according to Ipac.

    At least 18 former criminal offenders have been involved in terrorism cases in Indonesia since 2010, and most were radicalised in prison.

    In one case, an inmate was recruited after he was involved in fights. Two others were recruited because they wanted better food, or had found the tight-knit community of terrorist inmates appealing.

    Another factor in the radicalisation of inmates is the presence of jailed ideologues such as Abu Bakar Bashir, the spiritual leader of the old Jemaah Islamiah terror network, and Aman Abdurrahman, who is said to have ordered the Jan 14 attack in Jakarta which killed eight people, including the four perpetrators.

    Both Bashir and Aman are known to have followers in and out of prison, and have played active roles in the radicalisation of inmates.

    Efforts have since been made to isolate the militant leaders to prevent the spread of violent ideology.

    The Ipac report also says there is “probably no alternative to isolating the most hardline extremist prisoners in one or two facilities with specially trained staff so that controls on visitors, communications and outside donations can be strictly enforced”.

    Meanwhile, lawmakers on Tuesday asked Parliament for more time to deliberate on proposed legislative changes to beef up the country’s anti-terrorism laws.

    These include allowing the police to hold suspects involved in terror attack plots for up to six months, instead of a week, as well as making it an offence for citizens to join militant groups such as ISIS overseas.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • 16 Lelaki, Termasuk Pelajar Universiti Ditahan Di Malaysia Kerana Terlibat Dengan Kumpulan Pengganas

    16 Lelaki, Termasuk Pelajar Universiti Ditahan Di Malaysia Kerana Terlibat Dengan Kumpulan Pengganas

    Seorang pelajar universiti awam dan seorang warga asing adalah antara 16 lelaki ditahan kerana dipercayai terlibat dengan kegiatan kumpulan pengganas.

    Ketua Polis Negara Malaysia Khalid Abu Bakar berkata kesemua mereka yang berusia antara 20 dan 38 tahun ditahan Bahagian Anti-Pengganasan Cawangan Khas Bukit Aman di sekitar Selangor, Kelantan, Perak, Kedah, Pulau Pinang dan Sabah antara 21 September hingga 6 Oktober lalu.

    “Mereka yang ditahan terdiri daripada (lima) peniaga; (empat) juruteknik; (dua) penganggur; seorang guru kaunseling di sekolah kerajaan; seorang kakitangan bank; seorang pengurus eksekutif; seorang pencari barangan antik dan
    seorang pelajar,” katanya dalam kenyataan hari ini (9 Okt).

    PELAJAR UNIVERSITI RANCANG SUSUP MASUK KE SYRIA

    Encik Khalid berkata seorang pelajar berusia 20 tahun yang menuntut di sebuah universiti di Johor, ditahan ketika pulang ke tanah air di Lapangan Terbang Antarabangsa Kuala Lumpur (KLIA) Sepang, pada 22 September lalu.

    Menurutnya suspek berlepas ke Istanbul, Turki pada 7 September lalu dan ditahan pihak berkuasa Turki pada keesokan harinya kerana merancang untuk menyusup masuk ke Syria bagi menyertai kumpulan pengganas di negara itu.

    “Tangkapan yang dibuat pihak berkuasa Turki itu adalah hasil maklumat Cawangan Khas Bukit Aman,” katanya.

    BAI’AH DENGAN MUHAMMAD WANNDY MOHAMED JEDY

    Menurut Encik Khalid, seramai 14 lagi suspek warga tempatan yang ditangkap disyaki
    merupakan anggota pengganas ISIS daripada kumpulan yang diketuai Muhammad Wanndy Mohamed Jedy.

    Kesemua mereka disyaki berbai’ah secara online kepada Muhammad Wanndy dan menyalurkan dana kepadanya, katanya.

    Beliau juga menambah, dalam operasi itu polis turut menahan seorang lelaki warga asing berumur 32 tahun yang dipercayai berasal dari Utara Afrika kerana disyaki menganggotai Kumpulan Jabhat Al Nusra di Syria.

    “Lelaki itu ditangkap di Selangor pada 25 September lalu. Hasil siasatan juga mendapati suspek beberapa kali menyusup masuk ke Malaysia sejak Mei lalu. Semasa di Malaysia, suspek disyaki terlibat dalam sindiket pemalsuan dokumen perjalanan bagi kegunaan Kumpulan Jabhat Al Nusra,” katanya.

    Source: Berita MediaCorp

  • Suspected Batam Launch Site Of Foiled Rocket Attack Was 18km Away From Marina Bay

    Suspected Batam Launch Site Of Foiled Rocket Attack Was 18km Away From Marina Bay

    Suspects involved in the foiled plot to fire a rocket at Marina Bay had planned to launch the strike from a hill in Batam, said Indonesia’s counter-terrorism chief Suhardi Alius.

    The launch site in Taman Habibie, famous for a stairway locals call “the 1,000 steps”, is located about 17km from Singapore’s shoreline and just over 18km from the iconic Marina Bay Sands integrated resort.

    General Suhardi, who heads the National Counter-terrorism Agency (BNPT), said members of the Batam-based militant group had been measuring elevation points and the distance from the hill to their target in Singapore.

    “It’s true that they only did surveys and measured the angle of elevation from Habibie hill to Marina Bay, but Bahrun Naim had plans to send expert technicians to make the explosives and to prepare for the strike,” he said on Monday (Sep 26).

    The BNPT chief was referring to Bahrun Naim, an Indonesian militant believed to be in the Middle East fighting for the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS). General Suhardi was speaking at a closed-door dialogue with local editors and senior journalists in Jakarta.

    He added that Bahrun had coordinated the plot with the cell in Batam using social media, similar to how he is suspected to have communicated with other local militants in Indonesia.

    Indonesian police have since arrested six members of the cell, including its leader Gigih Rahmat Dewa, who was allegedly Bahrun’s point man for the rocket attack on Marina Bay.

    Bahrun is also believed to be linked to a 17-year-old who tried to blow himself up inside a Catholic church in Medan on Aug 28; and Nur Rohman, another suicide bomber who tried to attack a police station in the city of Solo in Central Java in July.

    National police chief Tito Karnavian had said that the teenager had “directly contacted” Bahrun, while Nur Rohman was said to have learnt to build bombs from Bahrun over Telegram, a smart-phone messaging application.

    General Suhardi said those were examples of how prevalent terrorist groups are making use of social media including Facebook, Youtube and Telegram.

    “An example is Batam, where Katibah Gonggong Rebus received orders from Bahrun through social media,” he added, referring to the KGR, which literally translates to Boiled Snails Cell, led by Gigih.

    The threat of terror continues to grow in South-east Asia and the rising danger of extremism was underlined as recently as last week when Malaysia said it had detained one of its citizens and deported three foreigners with links to militant groups.

    The latest arrest in Malaysia follows another one last month of three ISIS operatives who plotted attacks on the eve of the country’s Independence Day.

     

    Source: The Straits Times

  • Indonesia Arrests Another Suspect In Batam Attack Plot: Report

    Indonesia Arrests Another Suspect In Batam Attack Plot: Report

    Indonesia has arrested another terror suspect in Batam for allegedly plotting to attack Marina Bay in Singapore, the Antara News Agency reported on Sunday (Sep 4).

    The suspect, a 24-year-old unemployed man identified only by the initials LH, was arrested by counter-terrorist personnel at a cyber cafe in Batu Aji, Batam, on Saturday, police spokesman Agus Rianto was quoted as saying.

    The man is believed to be part of the KGR@Katibah GR, a group headed by Gigih Rahmat Dewa, who is alleged to be behind the plot to attack Marina Bay from Batam, which is just a short distance across the Singapore Strait. The group is said to have links to Syria-based Islamic State (IS) militant Bahrun Naim, who has encouraged attacks on Singapore.

    “LH was part of the group that was plotting an attack on Marina Bay,” said Mr Agus, the Antara News Agency reported. “He also underwent training using airsoft guns as preparations to go to Syria.”

    In August, Indonesian anti-terror forces arrested six men on suspicion of planning a rocket attack on Singapore. The six arrested were also allegedly from terrorist group KGR@Katibah GR.

    Police also seized bomb-making materials, guns, and arrows from suspects’ homes in the raid on Aug 5. But police said there were no signs that the rocket attack was anything more than a plan.

    The suspects are currently being investigated at special counter-terrorism squad Densus 88’s headquarters for their involvement in Islamic State’s Indonesian terror network.

     

    Source: ChannelNewsAsia

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