Banda Aceh, TAG. The
existence of an armed militant group in Aceh working to build a base for
terrorist activities across Southeast Asia was first discovered a year ago, but
nothing could be done until recently, Aceh Governor Irwandi Yusuf said on
Tuesday.
“There
was no legal basis to arrest them then. I myself had no authority to do so,”
Irwandi, who is a former member of the separatist group Free Aceh Movement
(GAM), told a news conference in Jakarta.
Irwandi
said young men in Aceh began to be recruited last year, to be sent to the Gaza
Strip to fight Israelis after receiving paramilitary training in Java.
“When
the conflict at the Gaza strip died down, an [separate, unnamed] organization
took the opportunity to recruit these boys to continue their paramilitary
training in Java. This was the beginning of the [terrorist] training,” he said,
adding that they moved back to Aceh after they were trained in Java.
Irwandi
declined to name the either organization. However, the Aceh branch of the
Islamic Defenders Front (FPI) claimed in February last year that it would send
guerillas to fight Israel after “physical training in the mountains of North
Aceh.”
Since
Feb. 22, police have killed six and captured 21 suspected militants in Aceh,
Jakarta and West Java. An increasing amount of evidence points to those arrested
as being terrorists, and not merely former members of the now-defunct GAM, as
some have suggested.
“We
must get to the bottom of this,” Irwandi said. “These terrorists are garbage
sent from Java.”
Jihad
Warriors
An
Aceh-based source backed up the governor’s statement, saying several members of
the alleged terrorist group had been deployed in Palestine during Israel’s
attack on Gaza in 2009, along with the FPI.
“I
don’t know whether they arrived in Palestine or not,” the source said. “However,
when they returned to Aceh, they became more extreme than FPI.”
“They may have been influenced by
mujahedeen from other countries,” the source said, adding that they had asked
the FPI to join them. However, FPI Aceh refused to do so after seeing the weapons
used in training.
“Their
religious beliefs are very radical, very different from what we have in Aceh,”
the source said. “They won’t get any support from the Acehnese.”
Yusuf
Al Qardhawi, the chairman of FPI Aceh, refused to comment about whether any of
his group’s members were captured in the raid.
Yusuf
said the FPI had never been involved in terrorism because it always referred to
ulema edicts when taking any action. “When we planned to deploy people to
Palestine, we got a license from the police, stated so in the media and we did
not use any guns,” he said.
Al-Qaeda
Claims
Last
weekend, a group calling itself “Tandzim Al-Qoidah Indonesia Serambi Mekkah”
released a statement on the Internet, saying it would keep fighting jihad even
though some of its members had been captured or killed.
Police
said they were still investigating the veracity of the claim, but Al-Chaidar, a
terrorism researcher in Aceh, backed up this claimed connection to Al-Qaeda,
saying the group no longer identified with Jemaah Islamiyah, but with Al-Qaeda.
The group has been flourishing since 2005 and now has four cells in Aceh, he
said.
Another
anonymous source in Aceh closely related to a Muslim hard-line group said
essentially the same thing. “The group calls itself the Tandzim Al-Qaidah Aceh.
The question is whether they have a direct link to Al-Qaeda under Osama bin
Laden. The members believe that if they die, they will go straight to heaven.”
Chaidar
said he believed that most of the estimated 150 members of the group had
received paramilitary training in Mindanao, Pakistan and Afghanistan.
“They
want to move their military training ground from Mindanao to Aceh because the
province is geographically strategic and it has easy access to other Southeast
Asian countries,” he said.
Chaidar
said the alleged terrorists arrested in Pamulang and Jakarta were connected to
the Aceh-based group as arms suppliers. The first source supported this, adding
that the group’s aim was to turn the province into their primary training
ground, like the Philippines’ Jolo Island in Mindanao.
“During
the February 22 police raid, the group had been training for more than one
month in the [Jalin] mountains.”
Ready
to Die
After
around-the-clock police operations netted at least 14 suspected militants in
the mountains of Aceh alone, Chaidar said he believed the group had broken into
smaller groups scattered throughout the Aceh Besar, Pidie, North Aceh and
Tamiang districts.
Sources
said members of the group in question were terrorists ready to die for their
cause.
“They’re
proud to call themselves terrorists,” said the source linked to the Muslim
hard-line group, adding there were at least 100 members and that they had been
training in the mountains of Aceh Besar, where police operations had been
heaviest.
The
source who told the Globe about the deployment to the Gaza strip said the same
thing.
“Even
though they’re small in numbers, their fighting ability is outstanding because
they’re not afraid to die,” the source said.[]
Militant Group ‘Proud To Call Themselves Terrorists’
Reviewed by theacehglobe
on
March 10, 2010
Rating:

No comments: