Tag: radicals

  • Don’t Let ISIS Divide Us

    Don’t Let ISIS Divide Us

    As i entered the lift two middle aged women seems shocked, i was in my normal islamic garb as i was heading to my lecture. I gave them a smile press close and face the door. From my back i heard a conversation in a language i didn’t understand but i could only recognized the word ‘PARIS…PARIS…PARIS’. Little they knew that i could see their reflection from the lift’s window, they where pointing to me a few times between the conversation. Trying to be hopeful that it is not what i think they might be talking about, as the lift opened i hold the door and gave them the biggest smile of the day. i walked away and my heart sank.

    | 17 NOV 2015 | 1030AM |

    After paying for my petrol i headed out to a heated shouting from two men, one of them was wearing a songkok (muslim headgear). Not knowing why they are fighting i could only hear cursing been thrown around. The muslim guy then drove away. As i was walking pass the other shouted the four letter word and said this “lian**** you isis! go and bomb yourself!”. I just kept silent and went away, my heart sank again.

    To my brothers and sisters,
    If you keep your conspiracy theories stories to your walls, you will just build walls not bridges. I sincerely hope that these two encounters of mine are isolated cases. I have beautiful friends from other faiths and cultures and i believe that to defend our homeland is a collective effort.

    It is our responsibility to not let hatred hit our shores.

    Your Singaporean brother from another mother
    Muhammad Zahid
    Humanitarian Worker

     

    Source: Muhammad Zahid Mohd Zin

  • Militants Intend To Kill Malaysian Who Is Slowing Them Down

    Militants Intend To Kill Malaysian Who Is Slowing Them Down

    KOTA KINABALU: Abu Sayyaf mi­­litants holding two Malaysian hostages are threatening to behead one of them if no payment is made soon as they move bases amid heavy Philippine troops’ movement in Jolo island.

    According to Filipino and Malaysian sources, the Abu Sayyaf group is facing pressure from the Philippine security forces which were closing in on them.

    Apparently, the gunmen wanted the cash fast as one of the two hostages was slowing them down.

    The sources said that Sarawak tourist Bernard Then, 39, had leg injuries and was not able to run with the gunmen during military operations around Jolo.

    Then and restaurant manager Thien Nyuk Fun, 50, were snatched from the Ocean King Restaurant in Sandakan on May 14 by a Filipino kidnap-for-ransom group.

    They are being held by Abu Sayyaf sub-commander Indang Susukan who was demanding 30 million pesos (about RM2.8mil) for their freedom.

    Families of the two Malaysians have been receiving calls from the Abu Sayyaf group, threatening to carry out the beheading.

    However, the families have been unable to raise the money and were seeking help from the Prime Minister as well as chief ministers of Sabah and Sarawak to help inter­­vene and secure their freedom.

    According to the sources, the situation turned critical especially after two Canadians, a Norwegian and a Filipina were kidnapped from a Philippine resort in Samal Island on Sept 21.

    They are widely suspected to have been brought to Jolo island though no group had claimed responsibility so far.

    Filipino sources believed that they might be held by Abu Sayyaf commander Al Habsi Misaya and another sub-commander from the notorious Sawajan family that triggered intensified security ope­rations in Jolo island.

    Though they are from different groups, they are linked to each other. The operations are forcing all of them to be on the run, a source said, citing that Then was thus slowing them down.

    Philippine officials have yet to confirm the whereabouts of the Canadians and Norwegian but they have spotted an abandoned boat believed to have been used by the kidnappers along a village coast in Jolo.

    Unlike previous kidnap victims who were mostly hidden in jungle hideouts, sources said the two Malaysians were now being moved all the time to avoid capture by Philippine military or police.

     

    Source: www.thestar.com.my

  • 2 Self-Radicalised Singaporeans Detained Under Internal Security Act

    2 Self-Radicalised Singaporeans Detained Under Internal Security Act

    Two self-radicalised Singaporeans have been detained under the Internal Security Act for involvement in terrorism-related activities, the Ministry of Home Affairs (MHA) announced on Wednesday (Sep 30).

    Muhammad Shamin Mohamed Sidek, 29, and Muhammad Harith Jailani, 18, were detained in August this year. Investigations showed that they had harboured the intention to make their way to Syria to join the terrorist group Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS) and engage in violence there, MHA said.

    Shamin was influenced by ISIS’s online radical propaganda and was earlier convicted and sentenced to three months’ jail under Section 267C of the Penal Code for inciting religious violence through his pro-ISIS postings on social media. MHA said he continued to express support for ISIS throughout his three-month imprisonment and was thus arrested under the ISA in July this year to assess if he posed a threat to Singapore’s security.

    Subsequent investigations by the Internal Security Department showed that Shamin planned to travel to Syria to join ISIS once he had raised enough money to fund the trip.

    Shamin had also decided that if he was unable to join ISIS, he would consider fighting alongside a regional militant group that he considered to be aligned with ISIS. “He was undeterred by his arrest under the ISA and said he would pursue his plans to join ISIS after his release from detention. Shamin said he was prepared to die in the course of defending the ‘caliphate’ that was declared by ISIS,” MHA added.

    Like Shamin, 18-year-old Harith was radicalised by online propaganda put up by ISIS. He harboured the intention to carry out armed attacks for the terrorist group, MHA said. “He was prepared to be trained by ISIS to fight and kill the group’s enemies, and to die in the process so that he would receive divine rewards for dying as a martyr.”

    Harith had collected information on how he could travel to Syria and also tried to radicalise those around him to support ISIS’ cause in an attempt to recruit them to join ISIS together with him.

    The detentions of Shamin and Harith underline the “persistent ISIS threat” and the threat posed by self-radicalised Singaporeans, MHA said. The ministry noted that a few of the
    Singaporeans who have been detained had even been prepared to carry out terrorist attacks in Singapore.

    “The Government takes a very serious view of any form of support for terrorism, including but not limited to the use of violence, and will take firm and decisive action against any person who engages in such activities,” the ministry said.

    It encourages those who are aware that someone is involved in terrorism-related activities, or who see suspicious activities to promptly inform the Internal Security Department (1800-2626-473) or call the Police (999).

     

    Source: www.channelnewsasia.com

  • How To Fight ISIS?

    How To Fight ISIS?

    The Islamic State, or ISIS, has captured the world’s attention with gruesome videos of beheadings, wanton destruction of antiquities and skilled use of social media.

    It has also captured a large part of eastern Syria and western Iraq, proclaimed a caliphate based in Raqqa, Syria, and attracted foreign jihadists from around the world.

    United States President Barack Obama said that the Islamic State must be degraded and ultimately defeated. He has appointed General John Allen to lead a coalition of about 60 countries in the task, relying on air strikes, special forces and training missions.

    Some critics want him to send more American troops; others say that the US should settle for a doctrine of containment.

    In the current US presidential campaign, some candidates are calling for “boots on the ground”. They are right: Boots are needed.

    But the soldiers who wear them should be Sunni Arabs and Turks, not Americans. And that says a lot about the nature of the triple threat that the US and its allies now face.

    The Islamic State is three things: A transnational terrorist group, a proto-state and a political ideology with religious roots.

    It grew out of Al Qaeda after the misguided US-led invasion of Iraq; like Al Qaeda, it appeals to extremist Sunni Islamists.

    But it has gone further, by trying to establish a caliphate, and is now a rival to Al Qaeda.

    Its possession of territory creates the legitimacy and capacity for offensive jihad, which it wages not only against infidels, but also Shia and Sufi Muslims, whom it considers “takfir”, or not true Islamic monotheists.

    The Islamic State extols the purity of seventh-century Islam, but it is extremely adept at using 21st-century media.

    Its videos and social-media channels are effective tools for attracting a minority of Muslims — primarily young people from Europe, America, Africa and Asia — who are struggling with their identity. Disgruntled, many are drawn to “Sheikh Google”, where Islamic State recruiters wait to prey upon them.

    By some estimates, there are more than 25,000 foreign fighters serving in the Islamic State today. Those who are killed are quickly replaced.

    SUNNI MUSLIM SOLDIERS TO COMBAT ISIS

    The tripartite nature of the Islamic State creates a policy dilemma. On the one hand, it is important to use hard military power to deprive the caliphate of the territory that provides it both sanctuary and legitimacy. But if the American military footprint is too heavy, the Islamic State’s soft power will be strengthened, thus aiding its global recruiting efforts.

    That is why the boots on the ground must be Sunni. The presence of foreign or Shia troops reinforces the Islamic State’s claim of being surrounded and challenged by infidels.

    So far, thanks largely to effective Kurdish forces, who are overwhelmingly Sunni, the Islamic State has lost about 30 per cent of the territory it held a year ago.

    But deploying additional Sunni infantry requires training, support and time, as well as pressure on Iraq’s Shia-dominated central government to temper its sectarian approach.

    After the debacle in Libya (where the Islamic State supports jihadist militias and has announced the creation of three “distant provinces”), Mr Obama is understandably reluctant to overthrow Syrian President Bashar Assad’s regime, only to see the Islamic State take control of more territory, accompanied by genocidal atrocities against Syria’s many non-Sunnis.

    But Mr Assad is one of the Islamic State’s most effective recruiting tools. Many foreign jihadists respond to the prospect of helping to overthrow a tyrannical Alawite ruler who is killing Sunnis.

    The US diplomatic task is to persuade Mr Assad’s supporters, Russia and Iran, to remove him without dismantling the remains of the Syrian state structure. A no-fly zone and a safe zone in northern Syria for the millions of displaced people could reinforce American diplomacy. And providing massive humanitarian assistance to the refugees (at which the American military is very effective) would increase US soft power enormously.

    As it stands, the funding and coordination of America’s soft-power strategy is inadequate. But we know that hard power is not enough, particularly to contest the cyber territory that the Islamic State occupies — for example, by developing a capacity to take down botnets and counter hostile social-media accounts.

    Even if the US and its allies defeat the Islamic State over the coming decade, we should be prepared for a similar Sunni extremist group to rise from the ashes.

    Revolutions of the type the Middle East is experiencing take a long time to resolve. The sources of revolutionary instability include tenuous post-colonial boundaries; arrested modernisation; the failed Arab Spring; and religious sectarianism, exacerbated by the interstate rivalry between Sunni-ruled Saudi Arabia and Shia-ruled Iran.

    In Europe, wars of religion between Catholics and Protestants lasted for nearly a century and a half. The fighting ended (with the Peace of Westphalia in 1648) only after Germany lost a quarter of its population in the Thirty Years’ War.

    But it is also worth remembering that the coalitions of that time were complex, with Catholic France aiding Dutch Protestants against Catholic Habsburgs for dynastic rather than religious reasons. We should expect similar complexity in today’s Middle East.

    Looking ahead in a region where the US has interests as varied as energy, Israel’s security, nuclear non-proliferation and human rights, American policymakers will need to follow a flexible strategy of “containment plus nudging”, which implies siding with different states and groups in different circumstances.

    For example, whether or not Iranian policy becomes more moderate, sometimes Iran will share US interests, and sometimes it will oppose them. In fact, the recent nuclear agreement may open opportunities for greater flexibility.

    To seize them, however, US foreign policy towards the Middle East will have to develop a higher level of sophistication than the current debate reveals.

    ABOUT THE AUTHOR:

    Joseph Nye is a professor at Harvard University and the author of Is the American Century Over?, recently co-chaired an Aspen Strategy Group discussion on the Islamic State and radicalism in the Middle East.

     

    Source: www.todayonline.com

  • Malaysian Students Participate In IS During Semester Breaks

    Malaysian Students Participate In IS During Semester Breaks

    MACHANG: The authorities did not rule out any possibilities of Malaysian students in the Middle East participating in the militant group, Islamic State (IS) in Syria during their semester breaks.

    Bukit Aman Special Branch Counter Terrorism Division, Assistant Director, Datuk Ayub Khan Mydin Pitchay said, it is difficult to monitor the activities of students outside the country especially those who  are not registered with the Malaysian Embassy there.

    “There are only some of our students abroad who are registered with our embassy. This group is easy to be monitored by us.

    “Others who are not registered took the trouble to go on their own. This group is beyond our control. We do not have any ability to control them.

    “Maybe they utilise the semester breaks to participate in the militant group operations in Syria,” Ayub Khan said when met after the safety and threat of the IS group talk in UiTM Machang campus Monday.

    He added that similar modus operandi is employed by Malaysian students in Pakistan, taking advantage of the university’s semester breaks to participate in the activities of Al-Qaeda in Afghanistan.

    Touching on the threats of IS in Malaysia, Ayub Khan said that for now, his team is actively monitoring the group to ensure that the threat is combated and does not become widespread among the public.

    However, he did not rule out the increasing severity of threats by the global militant IS group and more stringent controls are needed to prevent the people of this country from being influenced by these extremist groups’ doctrines.

    Currently, 11 Malaysians known to be advocating the militant group’s cause have been confirmed killed in Syria and Iraq. It was reported that five were killed in war while another six died as suicide bombers.

     

     

    Source: http://english.astroawani.com