Tag: Islam

  • Indonesia’s Elite Police Turning Tide On Militants

    Indonesia’s Elite Police Turning Tide On Militants

    JAKARTA (Reuters) – As the world battles a spike in assaults and plots by Islamist militants, Indonesia’s anti-terrorism unit is drawing praise for stemming a wave of bloody attacks in the sprawling Muslim-majority nation.

    Indonesia has foiled at least 15 attacks this year alone and made more than 150 arrests, disrupting plots ranging from suicide attacks in Jakarta to a rocket attack from Indonesia’s Batam island targeting Singapore.

    Going back to 2010, a Reuters analysis of data shows the elite unit, Special Detachment 88 (Densus 88), has prevented at last 54 plots or attacks in the nation of 250 million people, the world’s fourth largest.

    “Densus 88 has become better than pretty well any other counter-terrorism group in the world,” said Greg Barton, a terrorism export and research professor in Global Islamic Politics at Alfred Deakin Institute in Melbourne.

    “They have had an incredible workload and they have become remarkably good at what they do.”

    In the last six years, there has been only one major attack in Indonesia that caused civilian deaths, when assailants hit a Jakarta mall and police post with gunfire and bombs, resulting in the deaths of three Indonesians and a dual Algerian-Canadian national. All four attackers were also killed in the January 2016 attack.

    Between 2002 to 2009, there were nine major attacks by militants, leaving 295 dead and hundreds of others wounded.

    Since its formation in 2002, the unit has put a premium on clandestine intelligence gathering. Now much of that intelligence work is done online, by infiltrating and monitoring chat rooms, social media and messaging apps popular with militants.

    SELF-SUFFICIENT

    Few details about Densus 88 are publicly available.

    “We built our organization to learn from the enemy,” said a senior counter-terrorism officer who provided some insight into the working of the unit but spoke on condition of anonymity.

    Created in the aftermath of the deadly 2002 Bali bombings that killed more than 200 people, Densus 88 has about 400 to 500 members, state-of-the-art weaponry and training, said another official. It has received more than $200 million of funding from Western allies such as Australia and the United States.

    The unit is headed by a task force, a core of 30 or so senior members, said the Indonesian law enforcement source.

    “Many of them possess doctorates and have specialties like psychology and social behaviour,” the source added. “They are not like regular police.”

    The black clad, heavily armed members of Densus 88 sometimes seen during raids on suspected militant hideouts make up a small proportion of the unit, officials say.

    Far more personnel are dedicated to gathering intelligence in the field and monitoring communications and online activity. There is also a large team of investigators analysing that intelligence and forensically examining explosives and other evidence.

    Sidney Jones, the director of Institute for Policy Analysis of Conflict (IPAC), said the key to Densus 88’s success lies in its intelligence gathering.

    “They know the radical networks and have a good set of informers,” she said.  “It is unparalleled in terms of its ability to understand the sources of possible threats.”

    Despite Densus 88’s recent successes, the worry is that the militant threat to Indonesia is mounting as Islamic State fighters return battle-hardened from Syria and Iraq. The ultra-radical group also commands support from some Indonesians who have stayed at home.

    About 800 Indonesians have travelled to Syria to join Islamic State and 169 have been stopped en route and deported, according to Indonesia’s national counter-terrorism agency.

    In the past two months alone, there have been 40 arrests, and at least six attacks foiled, according to the Reuters study, which collated data with the assistance of IPAC staff. At least two of the attacks were planned for New Year’s Eve, police said.

    Many of these plots have been linked to Islamic State, with police alleging they were inspired, if not directed, by Bahrun Naim, an Indonesian militant who fled to Syria about two years ago.

    “These new homegrown terrorists and the local jihadists have never gone abroad. But with the advent of the Internet age and technologies like social media, it’s easier to make bombs and explosives to do operations,” said the law enforcement source.

    Authorities remain deeply worried about an attack during the holiday season.

    In the longer term, the worry is the possible return of hardened Islamic State fighters like Naim to the region.

    “They will be a different type of terrorist and the police are going to have a lot more problems,” said Indonesian analyst Rakyan Adibrata.

    Source: https://sg.news.yahoo.com

  • Indonesian Militants Planned Machete-Attack On New Year

    Indonesian Militants Planned Machete-Attack On New Year

    JAKARTA — Indonesian militants supporting Islamic State (IS) planned to attack a police post on New Year’s eve with machetes and knives, the authorities said on Monday, as the country’s elite anti-terror squad foiled yet another attack.

    The latest incident has underlined how the militants are determined to carry out attacks over the festive season, despite a massive nationwide security crackdown.

    National police spokesperson Rikwanto said four militants were preparing to attack a police post in Purwakarta, a city in West Java on New Year’s eve.

    “They had surveyed a few places and in the end they chose the police post as their target … because it has only a few security personnel as compared to the police station and police base,” said Mr Rikwanto, who goes by one name.

    The plot was foiled as Indonesia’s Special Counter-Terrorism Detachment 88, also known as Densus 88, arrested two of the would be attackers (only identified as Ivan and Rizal) on Sunday morning who led them to their hideout.

    Several hours later, police shot dead their two co-conspirators (identified as Abu Sofi and Abu Faiz), after they tried to attack officers.

    “They were told to surrender, but they refused and tried to attack officers with machetes, so we fired warning shots. When they still approached, we shot them,” said Awi Setiyono, another national police spokesman.

    The pair which was arrested on Sunday were taken to a police hospital in Jakarta.

    Mr Rikwanto said that the group is part of the Jamaah Anshor Daulah, an offshoot of the IS in Indonesia. However, he could not confirm the group’s link with Bahrun Naim, an Indonesian from Central Java who is now believed to be fighting for the IS in Syria.

    “We’re still investigating the group’s link with Bahrun Naim. However, they are affiliated with the IS,” he said yesterday (MON).

    Mr Rikwanto said the authorities seized several machetes and documents from the suspects’ house, including a will in which they stated that they had pledged their allegiance to the IS and wished to take part in suicide attacks.

    The latest incident came amid a security crackdown in several cities on Java after police arrested a would-be suicide bomber and other suspected Islamic militants who were allegedly planning a holiday season suicide bombing earlier this month.

    The government has stepped up security across the country, deploying 150,000 security personnel to safeguard churches, airports and other public places.

    Three suspected militants who were allegedly planning a New Year’s Eve suicide bombing were killed in a gunbattle last week on the outskirts of Jakarta.

    Police said the holiday season plot was uncovered during the interrogation of militants arrested on Dec 10 who were planning a suicide bomb attack on a guard-changing ceremony at the presidential palace in Jakarta the next day.

    Police have said the foiled plot planned to take place on Dec 11, in which a woman — who had worked in Singapore as a nanny — was to be the suicide bomber, was orchestrated by Naim.

    Naim is believed to have masterminded several terror plots, including a terror attack in Jakarta in January and a rocket attack against Singapore.

    On Christmas day, the authorities detained three Indonesian nationals deported from Syria for allegedly joining militants in the war-torn country.

    The three men were identified as Tomi Gunawan, 18, a resident of Pekanbaru in Riau; Jang Johana, 25, from Bandung, West Java; and Irfan, 21, from Jakarta.

    On the same day, the Indonesian Foreign Ministry noted that  since Jan last year, there have been 220 Indonesian citizens deported by the Turkish government for being suspected of crossing the border to join IS.

    Those deported from Turkey were brought to the Densus 88 headquarters for investigation upon entering Indonesia.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Syed Danial: A Message To Conservatives – Smile More Please

    Syed Danial: A Message To Conservatives – Smile More Please

    There is method in the madness.

    The ‘jubah sado’ (traditional Arabian attire for the muscularly-built) posting serves as an effective (methinks) preamble to the point I wish to make.

    Friends, in this ‘post-truth’ era, I think there’s a certain assumption that if one has conservative views, then he is not in touch with modernity. He is somewhat backward. Worse still, he is somehow linked to ‘extremism’.

    This is of course not true. I can’t believe I’m typing this. It’s worth makin it explicit. One can have views steeped in conservatism and still be in touch and quite adept with modernity – be it in embracing technology, being in the forefront of entrepreneurship, academia etc.

    Bringing me to my main point.

    We live in an era of so much fasaad. Right has become wrong and vice versa.

    Like it or not, that’s the environment we operate in. I feel in such an environment it really doesn’t help that a person whose views are conservative and steeped in the more than fourteen centuries of Islamic scholarship…. Also look severe and unsmiling. In a nutshell unapproachable.

    Again it may not be true. The person could be very friendly and kind.

    Fair or not, its the image of the conservative chap.

    In the interest of furthering the Dawah (invitation) why can’t we appear less ‘severe’? I bring up the ‘jubah sado’ to illustrate this point. Bear in mind we live in an age where it’s ok to be half naked in a foam party or dancing on bar tops. But wearing the jubah or thoube is considered ‘Arabism’ and somehow backward.

    Let’s celebrate our conservative values. If we are comfortable with it wear the jubah. Heck u don’t have to look so ‘severe’. I think it’s fine to jazz it up a little. There’s the jubah sado. Or the hooded Moroccan thoube. You get the idea.

    And very importantly let’s Smile more. I think we can all agree that’s the Sunnah (way) of Prophet Muhammad. And prophet Jesus, too, for that matter.

    So even in our dressing InshaAllah let dawah be our niyah. Wear cool stuffs. Smile more. And engage in meaningful conversations, putting across our principled stances with mauithatun Hasanah – beautiful preaching.

    Yeah and by the way, I see nothing wrong with the jubah pahlawan. ??Even the pink ones. Real men wear pink. They Juz don’t subscribe to the ideology of Pinkdot.

    Wallahualam.

     

    Source: Syed Danial

  • Hattan Tidak Mahu Undang Fitnah, Tiada Akaun Media Sosial

    Hattan Tidak Mahu Undang Fitnah, Tiada Akaun Media Sosial

    PETALING JAYA: Penyanyi Hattan tidak berminat untuk membuka akaun Facebook atau Instagram kerana merasakan ia penuh dengan perkara negatif berbanding positif.

    Hattan atau Mohd Shukri Shahabuddin, 52 tahun, berkata beliau juga tidak kisah sekiranya dikatakan tidak mengikut perubahan zaman kerana itu adalah pendiriannya.

    “Saya memang tiada Facebook atau Instagram walaupun ramai beranggapan seorang artis perlu ada akaun media sosial.

    “Jika ada kata saya kolot dan tidak mengikut perkembangan semasa, itu adalah hak mereka kerana keputusan itu adalah pendirian saya,” katanya kepada mStar Online.

    Menerusi pemerhatiannya, Hattan berkata media sosial pada hari ini dilihat bukan untuk menyatukan masyarakat secara maya sebaliknya menjadi medan pergaduhan dan tempat menyebarkan fitnah.

    “Apa yang saya lihat, media sosial sudah menjadi tempat untuk menyebarkan fitnah sehingga kadang-kala mampu membuat orang panik dan bimbang.

    “Lihat sahaja berapa ramai artis yang menjadi viral dan dikatakan sudah meninggal dunia oleh fitnah pihak tidak bertanggungjawab?

    “Jika hendak viralkan sesuatu perkara pun biarlah benda yang betul dan mendatangkan manfaat dan bukannya main muat naik status atau kongsi apa yang orang lain tulis,” ujarnya lagi kepada mStar Online.

    Laporan mStar Online menambah Hattan turut menasihatkan golongan artis agar tidak terlalu taksub dengan media sosial sehingga memudaratkan diri.

    Menurutnya, golongan artis sepatutnya menjaga nilai eksklusif diri mereka dan menggunakan teknologi dengan bijak.

    “Saya kadang-kadang tidak faham, nak pergi ke tandas pun hendak beritahu semua orang dan muat naik gambar.

    “Pada saya, kuasa media sosial itu memang penting untuk artis tetapi mereka juga perlu menjaga nilai eksklusif diri mereka.

    “Saya faham ada ramai di antara mereka yang terikat sebagai duta produk yang memerlukan mereka sentiasa mengemas kini perkembangan tetapi jangan keterlaluan sehingga mampu merosakkan reputasi sendiri,” katanya.

    Source: http://berita.mediacorp.sg

  • Muslims And The Birth Of Jesus Christ

    Muslims And The Birth Of Jesus Christ

    When the Prophet Muhammad migrated to Madina he was surprised to find the Jewish community fasting on a day known as ‘Ashura’, which fell in the Arabic (later Islamic) month of Muharram. During his life in Makkah, the Prophet used to observe a fast on this day. When he asked them why they fast on this day, the Jewish community replied that it was in celebration of Moses’ deliverance from Pharoah. The Prophet told his community that they too were believers in Moses and were deserving of commemorating the momentous occasion of his deliverance. Without questioning the authenticity of the date, despite the Hebrew calendar being different to the Arabic, the Prophet accepted their reason and instructed his community to observe the fast too. Acknowledging a sacred event is not related to the time of its happening as much as it is related to its meaning, which is to celebrate it in joy of God’s favours and love for the righteous.

    Maintaining a connectedness to religious occasions that are intimiately tied to sacred symbols is common in Islam and deeply connected to faith. Hajj, the annual pilgrimage, is the fifth pillar of Islam and replete with these meanings. For example, the circumambulation of a House built by Ibrahim and his son Ismail; the walking between Safa and Marwa where Hajar went on her search for water for her infant child; the throwing of stones in Mina where the devil tried to tempt Ibrahim away from sacrificing his son; and the ritual slaughter that marks the willingness of Ibrahim to sacrifice his son for God. This is the greatness of religious rituals; that they are forms imbued with profound meanings and not simply actions which are meant to be ritually repeated.

    The Quran tell us: “And remind them of the days of God; indeed, in them are signs for those who are forbearing and grateful.” As we approach the occasion of Jesus Christ’s birth, we feel that we are confronted with a day from among the ‘days of God’. This day was distinguished by an immense miracle related to his birth. This birth was connected to meanings of peace that we are in dire need of today.

    Yes, God made Jesus Christ a symbol of peace for this world.

    Did the Quran not inform us of Christ’s words, “Peace was upon me the day I was born, and will be on me the day I shall die, and the day I am raised to life again.”? These words alone are sufficient enough as a reason for our joy on this noble occasion, irrespective of its exact date and the differing opinions that exist among Christian denominations. The birth of Jesus Christ is less about the precise date and more about the meaning embodied in his emergence into this world.

    I offer my greetings to the Prophet Muhammad on the birth of Jesus Christ, who affectionaly described the son of Mary as his brother and said of him, “I have the best right to Jesus son of Mary in this world and the next.”

    Likewise, I offer my greetings to Muslims, Christians and humanity at large on this blessed occassion.

    And I say to Jesus Christ: my master, the spirit of God and His word, peace be upon you the day you were born, the day you shall die and the day you will be raised to life again.

     

    Source: www.huffingtonpost.com

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