Tag: Singaporeans

  • 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

  • Pink Dot Draws 28,000

    Pink Dot Draws 28,000

    Organisers of Singapore’s Pink Dot gay rally said the event attracted record numbers of participants.

    Despite Singapore being divided on gay rights issues, some 28,000 participants turned up for Pink Dot, as the event celebrated its 7th year.

    The event saw a crowd, mainly young, and mostly dressed in pink converge on the Hong Lim Park, which was decorated with pink balloons.

    PinkDot

    At nightfall, the participants formed a huge pink dot.

    Last year’s event drew 26,000 participants, and security was deployed for the first time due to protests from religious groups.

    The event now attracts more than ten times the number of people who attended the first rally, which was held in 2009.

    Section 377A of the Singaporean Penal Code forbids male same-sex acts, although female same-sex sexual activity was legalised in 2007. Although the law is sporadically enforced, a constitutional challenge against it was dismissed by courts last year

     

    Source: www.pinknews.co.uk

  • Pink Dot Packs Hong Lim

    Pink Dot Packs Hong Lim

    Describing Pink Dot as having had a “record turnout” is starting to become old hat, as organisers say 28,000 people joined in on the annual gay rights rally this year, breaking the record of 26,000 in 2014.

    Hong Lim Park was once again packed with pink-clad supporters from Singapore and overseas, although only Singaporeans and Permanent Residents were able to form the lit-up human pink dot at the end of the night.

    Yet many challenges still remain for the LGBT community. With Prime Minister Lee Hsien Loong still insisting that Singapore is “not ready” for same-sex marriage, LGBT activists are no closer to getting Section 377A of the Penal Code – which criminalises sex between men – repealed.Growing in size and scope every year, this year’s Pink Dot featured speeches from LGBT individuals and allies such as Vanessa Ho from Project X, Avin Tan from Action for AIDS and long-time gay rights activist Russell Heng. Performers in the well-received concert included singer-songwriter Inch Chua, rapper ShiGGa Shay and dance group Plus Point.

    The Media Development Authority (MDA), too, has remained steadfast in its treatment of media with LGBT themes. Taiwanese pop star Jolin Tsai’s song and music video We’re All Different, Yet The Same – which depicted the discrimination that LGBT people face in not being able have their families formally recognised – was recently banned from mainstream broadcast.

    Pink Dot’s spokesperson Paerin Choa revealed at the press conference that a 15-second promotional video made for screening in cinemas was yesterday refused a rating by the MDA. This means that the video, which contained footage of last year’s lit-up Pink Dot, cannot be screened in Singapore and is effectively banned.

    Organisers said MDA’s cited reason was that “it is not in the public interest to allow cinema halls to carry advertising on LGBT issues, whether they are advocating for the cause, or against the cause.”

    “After the setbacks that we had experienced over the last 12 months, giving up and losing hope would have been the easy thing to do. But we also know that Singapore’s LGBT community are a very resilient bunch, and in view of these challenges, we still have much to celebrate,” Choa said.

    As he stood in the hot, humid crowd, long-time LGBT ally Reverend Doctor Yap Kim Hao believed that the growing crowd indicated a “very promising future” for the LGBT community.

    “This shows a lot of public support,” he told The Online Citizen. “It shows a public awareness of the injustice faced by the community. And the LGBT people are also no longer hiding themselves, they are out and proud.”

    Olivia Chiong, whose blog on same-sex parenting was recently picked up by Buzzfeed, said she and her partner Irene has watched the numbers at Pink Dot grow. “It’s a nice time to catch up with friends, some of whom we only saw last year!” she said. “Pink Dot is like Chinese New Year for gay people!”

    That said, Chiong would prefer not to have need of an event like Pink Dot at all: “We need to do this now, but I hope we eventually grow [in acceptance of LGBT people] until we no longer need Pink Dot.

     

    Source: www.theonlinecitizen.com

  • Yaacob Ibrahim’s Lack Of Action Against Pink Dot Sg Will Cost Him Politically

    Yaacob Ibrahim’s Lack Of Action Against Pink Dot Sg Will Cost Him Politically

    Assalamualaikum Dr Yaacob,

    I am writing to you, as the Muslim community in general feels very distressed that not only is an immoral activity about to take place contrary to the democratic wishes of the silent majority but also an illegal one too. Illegal in the sense that it infringes on Section 377A of the penal code against homosexual practices in our country (and that of neighboring Malaysia, Indonesia & Brunei)!

    What is particularly alarming is that Mediacorp Artistes under your watch are being appointed as their licentious ambassadors as well. Is this the best you can perform as the minister in charge of both communications and Muslim affairs? Never mind that you have failed for decades to fight for Malay/Muslim rights in this country but you have now failed to stop plain challenges to Islamic principles and its holy definition of what constitutes normal, healthy functioning families likewise?

    In a lot of areas are Muslims already being deprived, from loudspeakers in mosques to readily available Halal food in NTUC Foodfare/government institutions to total segregation of hawker food stalls and wet markets selling Muslim foods to prevent contamination from Haram stuffs and not forgetting, the Hijab issue at workplaces. Instead, we have witnessed more and more gay themed spas being opened across the island along with their fornicated pubs and HIV rates have shot up as a result. Is this not a clear enough indication to halt such abomination?

    Therefore, I cannot understand how you and your PAP leaders can allow this kind of lewd event to take place at Hong Lim Park when the law clearly stipulate prohibitions of matters on “Race, Language, Religious and illegality”? Since this present government is afraid to uphold the wishes of the conservative majority and maintain the status quo of a decent, virtuous “Asian society” like Mr Muhamad Faisal of the Worker’s Party did by participating in the “wear white event” then I think its for the long term good that we the people including your good self, prepare for shake ups starting from Moulmein Kallang where Mr Faisal’s party previously contested and obtained quite a good result.

    Muhd Irfan Abdul Halim
    A.S.S. Contributor

    Source: www.allsingaporestuff.com

  • Zulfikar Shariff: Jangan Permainkan Hukum Allah

    Zulfikar Shariff: Jangan Permainkan Hukum Allah

    Allah dah cakap jangan buat. Nak buat juga.

    Dah berfirman bahawa mengikut kaum Lut salah.

    Nak juga buat.

    Nabi dah bersabda orang yang didapati meliwat akan dihukum. Dah sebut hukuman yang patut dijalankan.

    Masih lagi nak buat.

    Lepas tu cakap, Allah Maha pengampun. Jadi Allah akan ampunkan dosa meliwat.

    Memang lah Allah pengampun. Tapi janganlah take for granted pula.

    Dah tentu dah diarahkan jauhi. Nak buat juga, tak boleh lah nak guna alasan pengampunan.

    Kalau pencuri tak berhenti-henti mencuri janganlah nak assume hakim akan ampunkan je.

    Sambil dia mencuri sambil dia cakap hakim akan ampunkan.

    Ni bukan assume Allah akan maafkan. Ni saja nak permainkan hukum Allah je.

    Allah cakap jangan buat…nanti Allah murka. Dia buat juga.

    Permainkan lah kalau berani sangat. Api tu panas.

     

    Source: Zulfikar Shariff

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