Tag: ISIS

  • Combating Self-Radicalisation: What Are The Signs, What Can Family And Friends Do?

    Combating Self-Radicalisation: What Are The Signs, What Can Family And Friends Do?

    What are the signs to look out for?

    Following the recent arrests of two self-radicalised youths, there have been calls for the community to play a part in identifying persons who might have been influenced by extremist propaganda, and to alert the authorities.

    Experts said there are telltale signs that family members and friends can look out for.

    Dr Munidasa Winslow, a psychiatrist at Novena Medical Centre, said this could be a sudden change, like spending more and more time on religious practices.

    Typically, the individual is also likely to be withdrawn, secretive and spend a lot of time online.

    Said psychologist Carol Balhetchet: “Family or friends or neighbours would say something and they would walk away or get very aggressive about it, and be very opinionated about something… The main sign is they isolate themselves and don’t seem to have many friends.”

    Dr Lim Boon Leng, a psychiatrist at Gleneagles Medical Centre, said most of these individuals “are marginalised” and probably neglected by their parents. “They don’t have people to turn to or mentor to turn to,” he added.

    Pasir Ris-Punggol GRC MP Zainal Sapari, a former school principal, said the “trigger point” to report someone to the authorities is knowing that he or she is sympathetic to the ideas of the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS). “Sympathising with the ISIS cause is, I believe, the first step in terms of wanting to join in the terrorist cause,” he added.

    The Ministry of Home Affairs told The Straits Times that when a report is made, initial investigations will be carried out. In appropriate cases, the person may be referred for counselling and other mitigation measures without the need for arrest.

    Counselling or rehabilitation programmes are tailored to the person’s specific circumstances, including age, it said. Should it be necessary, the person could be arrested for further investigations. But this will depend on the extent of radicalisation, and the risk and potential threat the person poses.


    What is the typical profile of a teen vulnerable to being radicalised?

    Teenagers who are isolated from their families, who do not feel close to their loved ones, or who are detached from their social communities such as schools, can be easily influenced by radical ideology from terror groups such as the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, said Dr Carol Balhetchet, a clinical psychologist and senior director for youth services at the Singapore Children’s Society.

    “These are the same sort of young people who would join gangs, because they do not feel committed or feel like a part of their social group,” she said. “They may be loners in school or loners in their family unit. These teens are the ones who would easily fall prey to outside influence.”

    Dr Kumar Ramakrishna, head of policy studies at the S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, said some young people who are unemployed or bored may also be susceptible as they seek adventure and excitement abroad.

    Psychiatrist Lim Boon Leng added that teenagers can also lack the ability to understand the consequences of their actions while acting on impulse.

    “The immediate gain that they see from joining an extremist group, such as the sense of glory or the reinforcement they get, are very attractive to them. They do not think about what is going to happen to them in five years or even in one year,” said Dr Lim.

    “It is this impulsiveness that sometimes tips them over and makes them decide to do something to prove themselves to these extremist groups.”


    What can parents and others do?

    Parents play a key role in keeping their children on the straight and narrow.

    For a start, they can take greater interest in what their children are doing and pay more attention to what they are exposed to on the Internet, experts say.

    Dr Lim Boon Leng, a psychiatrist at Gleneagles Medical Centre, suggested: “Keep the computer or devices out in the open, so that the parents can see what they are doing.”

    Parents also have to sit their children down for a talk if they suspect that something is amiss.

    Dr Munidasa Winslow, a psychiatrist at Novena Medical Centre, said they can start by asking open-ended questions such as what they think about radical beliefs, for example.

    “It also depends on how much they trust you to talk to you about it. It is a bit like having a conversation about sex. There must be a safe place, a safe time and a safe person,” he added.

    However, in doing so, experts said parents should not judge or victimise their children.

    “Try to understand what is the reason he is being radicalised. Is it because the parents are not paying enough attention, or is there bullying in school, is he being ostracised or having other social issues at hand?” Dr Lim said.

    There could also be other reasons, for instance, the individual may have psychiatric conditions such as attention deficit hyperactivity disorder or depression.

    Nevertheless, the “best thing” to do is to seek professional help as family members may not be able to deal with the issue, said Dr Carol Balhetchet, senior director for youth services at the Singapore Children’s Society.

    “Bring them to the family service centre, bring them to a government agency or authority who is equipped to refer them to more professional help or the right authority to contain the situation,” she said.


    Why is extremist propaganda so attractive to teens?

    Propaganda put out by ISIS to sell concepts like the Islamic State, the Caliphate and their call for Muslims to migrate to Syria is portrayed in a jazzed-up manner that captures the imagination of some youth, said Mr Mohamad Alami Musa, the Head of Studies in Inter-Religious Relations in Plural Societies Programme at RSIS.

    These ideals are not part of mainstream Islamic teaching, but have been made even more appealing by the high-quality videos uploaded and widely-shared online by the terrorist group.

    “The ideology has been packaged with such gloss, sound and colour. The content is also being distributed with the clever use of social media, which resonates with young people,” he said.

    “These things are attractive to young minds who have this idealism of wanting to change the world. Such content makes it very tempting to be swayed by such virulent ideology.”

    Psychiatrist Lim Boon Leng says the violent images shown by ISIS can also be a reflection of the power the group has, and this might attract youth in search of strong and protective figures.

    “Marginalised youth who feel that they are vulnerable within their own communities may think that these extremist groups can help protect them,” he said.

    The promise of having a better life by joining a terrorist group may also appeal to some youth, especially if they are isolated from their families or society, added Dr Carol Balhetchet.

    “It is the promise of things to come, versus what they have right now,” she said.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • 19 Year Old Planned To Join Syria, Intended To Kill President And Prime Minister

    19 Year Old Planned To Join Syria, Intended To Kill President And Prime Minister

    The 19-year-old student detained last month for planning to join terror group Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) intended to kill President Tony Tan Keng Yam and Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong if he could not leave Singapore for Syria, Mr Lee disclosed on Friday.

    His comments, in a speech at the opening of the annual Shangri-La Dialogue security summit, come two days after the Ministry of Home Affairs announced it had detained M Arifil Azim Putra Norja’i, and arrested another 17-year-old student who had been radicalised for further investigations.

    The ministry had said Arifil gave considerable thought to how he would attack key facilities and assassinate government leaders, but did not go into details.

    On Friday, Mr Lee said of his case: “This is why Singapore takes terrorism, and in particular ISIS, very, very seriously. The threat is no longer over there, it is over here.”

    Mr Lee also announced that Singapore’s deployment of a KC-135 tanker refueling aircraft to the Middle East started on Friday. The tanker is part of Singapore’s participation in the international coalition against ISIS.

    In his speech, Mr Lee said terrorism was not an entirely new phenomenon, and various politically-motivated terror groups have largely faded away.

    But the problem of jihadi terrorism will be around for a long time, and many societies were now finding home-grown terrorists and self-radicalised individuals who can mount attacks with minimal resources.

    ISIS has managed to exploit the Internet and social media to attract over 20,000 foreign fighters from all over the world, who will pose a threat when they return.

    ISIS supporters have carried out lone-wolf attacks in a number of countries, and two weeks ago, ISIS leader Abu Bakar al-Baghdadi repeated a call for Muslims to migrate to the Islamic state or wage war in their home countries, Mr Lee added.

    ISIS has also said it intends to establish a wilayat, or province under the caliphate, in South-east Asia, which has become a key recruitment centre for the group. Over 500 Indonesians and dozens of Malaysians have joined ISIS, and its Malay Archipelago combat unit, Katibah Nusantara, has been active on social media.

    Radical groups in the region have also pledged their allegiance, including Jemaah Islamiah spiritual leader Abu Bakar Bashir, whose followers in Singapore planned to set off truck bombs after the Sept 11, 2001 attacks on America.

    Several hundred terrorists in jail in Indonesia are also due to be released in the next two years, Mr Lee said.

    “The idea that ISIS can turn South-east Asia into a province of a worldwide Islamic caliphate controlled by ISIS, that is a grandiose, pie-in-the-sky dream,” Mr Lee added.

    “But it is not so far-fetched that ISIS could establish a base somewhere in the region, in a geographical area under its physical control like in Syria and Iraq, somewhere far from the centres of power of state governments, somewhere where the governments’ writs does not run.

    “And there are quite a few such places in South-east Asia. If ISIS did that, it would pose a very serious threat to the whole of South-east Asia.”

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Asatizah Perlu Pertingkat Bimbingan Agar Belia Jauhi ISIS

    Asatizah Perlu Pertingkat Bimbingan Agar Belia Jauhi ISIS

    Anak-anak muda Islam harus mengejar ‘jihad keamanan’ dengan mencari jalan terbaik untuk membentuk keamanan bagi manfaat masyarakat, negara dan penduduk Singapura amnya.

    Jihad sebenar dalam konteks Singapura hari ini adalah membentuk suasana aman dan mempamerkan nilai-nilai murni Islam.

    Mantan Mufti, yang kini Penasihat Pejabat Mufti, Shaikh Syed Isa Semai ketika diminta mengulas mengenai kes dua belia radikal sendiri – seorang diberkas dan seorang lagi ditahan – di bawah Akta Keselamatan Dalam Negeri (ISA) berkata:

    “Anak-anak muda mempunyai kefahaman yang masih tipis terhadap agama. Apabila mereka bercakap tentang jihad, mereka terus memikirkan tentang perang. Mereka lupa sebenarnya Islam cintakan keamanan.”

    Menurutnya remaja Islam di Singapura perlu memahami dengan lebih jelas konsep jihad dengan membuktikan kepada Singapura bahawa Islam bukan agama keganasan dan anak-anak Melayu sebenarnya juga menolak pengganasan, kata Shaikh Syed Isa.

    Beliau berkata masyarakat Islam sendiri perlu berusaha keras untuk membanteras anak-anak muda meradikalkan diri sendiri menerusi Internet.

    Beliau turut menyarankan agar pakar-pakar media sosial bergabung tenaga dengan ustazah bagi membolehkan setiap keraguan tentang Islam di kalangan anak dijawab di laman Internet.

    “Kebanyakan ustaz mungkin tidak mendalam keupayaan tentang Internet. Kita boleh bergabung dengan pakar Internet di luar dengan tujuan mendidik anak-anak muda ke jalan Islam yang sebenar.

    “Janganlah Islam dilihat selah-olah ia satu agama yang tiada keihsanan dan kebaikan. Kita mesti melawan arus kejahatan dan moga Unknown memberikan kita taufik dan hidayahnya dalam usaha kebaikan ini,” ujar Shaikh Syed Isa.

    Seorang lagi pemimpin agama, Ustaz Sheik Hussain Sheik Ya’kub berkata usaha perlu dipertingkat untuk menyesuaikan pendidikan agama dengan keperluan golongan remaja.

    Beliau yang juga presiden Persatuan Muhammadiyah berpendapat syarahan agama misalnya harus memberi perhatian khusus untuk remaja dan bukan diadakan secara umum.

    “Berdasarkan maklum balas yang saya dengar, ada sebahagian anak muda yang tidak menghargai golongan asatizah dan sudah hilang rasa hormat.

    “Saya juga rasa kurikulum agama kita perlu diubah. Teknik pengajaran juga kita perlu tukar. Kita tidak boleh lagi ikut pendekatan macam 50 tahun lalu. Yang penting, kita sendiri harus bersedia untuk berubah agar dapat lebih mendekati anak muda masa kini dengan isu semasa dan cabaran mereka,” kata beliau.

    Naib Ketua Pusat Harmoni yang juga Pengerusi Masjid An-Nahdhah, Ustaz Muhammad Fazalee Ja’afar pula menambah: “Banyak usaha telah dilakukan oleh masyarakat Islam untuk mendidik masyarakat kita mengenai Islam yang sebenar iaitu Islam yang membawa kepada kesejahteraan dan keamanan buat semua.

    “Bahkan di Pusat Harmoni, melalui program yang kami anjurkan telah dapat mendekati seramai 40,000 pengunjung ke pusat ini semenjak ia mula beroperasi pada tahun 2006.

    “80 peratus dari pengunjung merupakan masyarakat bukan Islam yang mana melalui program ini, mereka diberikan pendedahan akan erti Islam yang sebenar.

    “Melalui pendedahan ini juga mereka memahami bahawa pengganasan serta fahaman radikal sama sekali bukan merupakan sebahagian dari ajaran Islam.”

    Menurutnya peristiwa penangkapan ini memberikan isyarat peri penting semua lapisan masyarakat berganding bahu untuk terus bersikap berwaspada dalam menangani isu pengganasan ini. Usaha mendekati dan mendidik lebih ramai anak serta belia mengenai Islam adalah penting dan harus dipergiatkan.

    Sementara itu, Imam Masjid Ba’alwie, Habib Hassan Al-Attas, yang juga anggota majlis Pertubuhan Antara Agama (IRO), menambah:

    “Sebuah pohon yang akarnya kuat jika tertiup angin kencang tetap tidak akan berganjak. Mereka yang ikhlas dan teguh imannya akan sentiasa di dalam jagaan Allah dan tidak akan terayun dengan tipu daya nafsu dan hasutan syaitan.”

     

    Source: http://beritaharian.sg

  • Singapore Identified As Possible Target For Attack By Recent ISIS Social Media Post

    Singapore Identified As Possible Target For Attack By Recent ISIS Social Media Post

    Singapore has been identified as a possible target for attack by a recent Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) posting on social media, a report this week said.

    ISIS supporters from the region have also cited the Philippines and the United States as targets, the report’s author, S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies analyst Jasminder Singh, told The Straits Times.

    This development comes as Malaysia last month nabbed a cell with explosives targeting Putrajaya and the federal Parliament, and as Singapore’s Home Affairs Ministry on Wednesday announced the detention of a 19-year-old student who made plans to join ISIS in Syria and carry out attacks here.

    It is not the first time Singapore has been cited by radicals. Last year, extremist English-language magazine Resurgence cited the Phillip Channel and Sembawang Naval Base in a piece on how militants could attack at sea.

    The threat to Singapore and the region is set to grow as ISIS’ Malay archipelago combat unit, Katibah Nusantara, formed in Syria last August for South-east Asian fighters who find it easier to communicate in Bahasa Indonesia and Malay rather than Arabic, gains ground.

    There are now more than 700 fighters from Indonesia and over 200 fighters from Malaysia fighting in Iraq and Syria, Mr Singh noted in the report published this week. While they make up a small proportion of over 30,000 foreign fighters from 90 countries, the unit scored its first major combat success last month, seizing five Kurdish-held areas in Syria.

    The unit is likely to gain importance in ISIS’ strategic goal of setting up a worldwide caliphate, with returning fighters mobilised to undertake attacks and even declare a new branch in this region.

    “The downward slide of jihadist appeal and success since 2009 has been reversed by Katibah Nusantara’s success in Iraq and Syria,” Mr Singh wrote.

    He said Malaysian fighters have also seized on local issues like the push for an Islamic penal code to win support. More recently, ISIS sympathisers online have called on Rohingya fleeing persecution in Myanmar to go to Syria.

    Professor Rohan Gunaratna, who heads Singapore’s International Centre for Political Violence and Terrorism Research, says the unit poses a severe threat to Singapore and South-east Asia.

    “It has multiple functions: to train people capable of carrying out attacks in Iraq and Syria, to instigate South-east Asians to mount attacks in their home countries, and to radicalise South-east Asians online, recruit them and physically facilitate their entry into Iraq and Syria,” he said.

    Hence, the strategy to counter this influence has to be multi- pronged, from engaging the community to exposing ISIS’ evils online. Muslim leaders worldwide are also leading the effort to counter ISIS, he added.

    They include Singapore’s Mufti, Dr Fatris Bakaram, who said it was a religious obligation for Muslims here to report to the authorities those who pose a threat.

     

    Source: www.straitstimes.com

  • Alfian Sa’at: Calvin Cheng Getting Too Big For His Boots

    Alfian Sa’at: Calvin Cheng Getting Too Big For His Boots

    Last one before I wash my hand of this tawdry ex-NMP, ex-price-fixer, ex-young-PAP and current has-been-yet-wannabe affair. Uh, yucks:

    I have been off Facebook for almost two weeks, trying to find some quiet time. The grief comes in waves and the feelings are still raw.

    Imagine then my shock at reading Calvin Cheng’s post, trying to link me and my writings with radicalised youths, calling me a ‘domestic agitator’ who deserves to be detained without trial once ‘red lines are crossed’ (of course with draconian instruments like the ISA the definition of this ‘red line’ is meant to be conveniently arbitrary).

    Was this a response to something recent that I posted? No. It was a response to the recent ISA arrests of some Muslim youths. And somehow Calvin Cheng found it necessary to tar me with the same brush, perhaps in the hope of threatening me to keep silent, or not raise questions about certain issues that make him uncomfortable—or that he doesn’t have the capacity to rebut robustly and convincingly.

    The suggestion that I might be linked to Muslim extremism would be hilarious if not for the fact that Calvin Cheng thinks that it is a valid charge. He probably has no idea about how I’ve been attacked by those from the Wear White campaign and accused of being a ‘secular fundamentalist’. He doesn’t know that my play, ‘Nadirah’, was about interfaith understanding, and that my play ‘Parah’ critiqued Malay-Muslim ethnocentricism in Malaysia. These details don’t bother him, because he probably thinks that when you want to get a Muslim person to shut up, then you go full on McCarthy and try to associate him with terrorism. Which is its own kind of racism.

    I have at various times tried to record the experiences of being a Malay minority in Singapore. And they have all been above board–it’s there in my plays, my books. These works have been funded by government bodies, which have very strict guidelines on anything that might cause racial and religious discord. Online, I don’t join clandestine closed groups and polemicise in echo chambers. The very fact that my posts are set to public means that just about anyone is free to tell me whether I have indeed crossed a line, like for example if any of my points about Singapore not honouring the ideals of multiculturalism is seen as vile hate speech against the Chinese. Calvin Cheng would have ample opportunity to engage me on these matters. And if indeed he had reasonable arguments to offer, then I would most certainly temper my posts. But he has chosen not to, and instead snipes at me without specifying which of my writings fall into the category of ‘terrorist propaganda’—which is what those youths (in MHA’s account) had been exposed to.

    I actually think that this Calvin Cheng has had me in his gunsights for a while now. I don’t write exclusively about race, and I’m sure my writings about Amos Yee or Lee Kuan Yew must have pissed him off in some way. So he seizes the opportunity to lambast me based on some current event and spectacularly misfires.

    The online world is a strange one. For some reason some of the most articulate social commentators—Alex Au, Andrew Loh, Carlton Tan, Howard Lee, Vincent Wijeysingha, Kirsten Han, Lynn Lee, Joshua Chiang, Gwee Li Sui, Imran Mohd Taib, Sudhir Thomas, Loh Kah Seng, Thum Ping Tjin, Isrizal, Martyn See, Chris Ho, Donald Low (whose smackdown of Calvin Cheng really revealed what an intellectual pygmy the latter was) etc—tend to be critical of the establishment. And in the other corner, we have Jason Chua and Calvin Cheng. It must be terribly frustrating and lonely. Once I get past my annoyance, I realise that what I really feel for Calvin Cheng is pity. Pity that the sheer paucity of people in his corner has led him to think that he is bigger than he really is. Pity that his responses in the wake of his slander has run along the lines of yapping taunts like ‘come sue me’, ‘come slap me now…you don’t have the balls’, ‘take a queue number’, ‘make me take down the flag from my profile (if you think I dishonour it)’. Pity that in shooting his mouth off, he’s succeeded in shooting the messenger–oh, and his own foot.

     

    Source: Alfian Sa’at