Ten years after bombs at two nightclubs on the island of Bali killed 202 people, mostly foreign tourists including Taiwanese Eve Kuo (郭惠敏), 24, and four members of a Taipei-based rugby club — Australian James Hardman, 28; Englishman Daniel Braden, 28; and Godfrey Fitz, 39, and Craig Harty, 35, both of South Africa — Indonesia has won international praise for its “counterterrorism” efforts. Militant organizations have been fractured and many of their leaders have been killed or jailed.
But an Associated Press (AP) analysis shows the number of strikes within the country has actually risen, especially since 2010, when radical imams called on their followers to focus on domestic targets rather than on Westerners. The more recent attacks have been conducted with less expertise, and the vast majority of victims have been Indonesians.
“It turns out that the terrorism problem in Indonesia is not finished yet,” said Major General Tito Karnavian, a former counterterrorism official recently appointed police chief of Papua Province. “The quality of their attacks has decreased, but the quantity has increased.”
Since Oct. 12, 2002, when the Bali attacks killed 202 people — including 88 Australians and seven Americans — four major attacks were targeted at Westerners in Indonesia, causing 45 deaths. The last was in 2009, when attacks on the J.W. Marriott and Ritz-Carlton hotels in Jakarta killed seven people. That compares to 15 attacks against Indonesian security forces, local authorities, Christians and moderate Muslims in just the past two years. Those attacks have killed a total of 11 people — all police officers — and wounded dozens of civilians.
Although the targets may have shifted, the recruitment methods are still the same. Young men are indoctrinated to believe that as jihadist “grooms” they will reap God’s rewards for martyrdom — paradise for the bomber and 70 family members, and the gift of 72 virgin angels. It is a belief shunned by most Muslims.
“Fadlan,” a convicted militant who goes by a single-name alias, was trained to be a suicide bomber in 2001 by the group that sent two other bombers to the Bali nightclubs on a busy Saturday night. He told AP that his mentor, Imam Samudra, one of the plot masterminds, deemed it too risky to use him in the attacks because he was already wanted for an earlier botched bombing.
Today, Fadlan believes he would be in paradise if he had been picked.
“I still believe it, because it’s not promised by my recruiter, but by God,” Fadlan said in a mosque near his house in central Jakarta.
Fadlan was jailed for four years in 2006 after being found guilty of harboring terrorists, including Noordin M. Top, who was Southeast Asia’s most wanted militant before police killed him in 2009. Fadlan was released for good behavior that same year and is now part of the Indonesian government’s deradicalization program, designed to reform convicted extremists. He told AP he was also involved in two 2001 bombings at churches in eastern Jakarta that injured more than 70 worshipers. He was never convicted of those attacks due to a lack of evidence.
Now 36, Fadlan says he is not actively involved with any militant groups in Indonesia and is no longer interested in becoming a groom there because the country is not seen as a battleground for holy war. But he smiles broadly when asked if he would still be willing to serve as a suicide bomber on another front if called.
“Nobody refuses a reward in heaven, right?” he says. “But I live like I’m in a large aquarium now, [the] authorities are watching me everywhere I go, and I could not go abroad.”
A turning point for Indonesian militant groups came in 2010, when police raided an alleged paramilitary jihadi camp hidden in the mountains of Aceh Province. A crackdown followed with more than 100 suspected militants either killed or arrested.
Another alleged Bali bombings mastermind, known simply as Dulmatin, was killed in a raid. Radical Muslim cleric Abu Bakar Bashir was arrested, and last year was sentenced to 15 years in prison.
That led Indonesian extremist religious leaders to order militants to change their mission. Instead of going after Westerners and American symbols they were directed to target Indonesian “infidels” such as the police, anti-terrorism squads, lawmakers and others deemed as obstacles to transforming the secular country into an Islamic state governed by Shariah law.
Most Indonesians, in a country of 240 million people, practice a moderate form of Islam that condemns violence, and the government there is keeping up pressure against extremists. Data from the Indonesian National Police revealed more than 700 militants have been arrested over the past 10 years, including 84 last year. Dozens more have been killed since the Bali bombings.
Though the number of domestic attacks has risen, suicide bombers are more likely to act alone or in smaller groups.
“I don’t think there is any one person who is the current face of terrorism in Indonesia,” said Ken Conboy, a Jakarta-based expert on Southeast Asian terrorism. “Rather, the terrorists have splintered into small cells that have only fleeting contact, if that, with one another.”
That lack of organization makes it more difficult to organise large-scale attacks.
Last year, a suicide bomber blew himself up inside a mosque packed with police, injuring 30 people, and another detonated his explosives in a church in Central Java’s Solo town, injuring 22 worshipers.
Last month, Indonesian police arrested 10 alleged Islamist militants and seized a dozen homemade bombs from a group suspected of planning suicide attacks against security forces and plotting to blow up the parliament building. The alleged bomb maker, Muhammad Toriq, turned himself in to police while wearing an empty suicide vest. The explosives seized were pipe bombs, dangerous but much less powerful than those used in Bali 10 years ago. However, other would-be suicide bombers remain at large.
In March, authorities received a tip that at least one jihadist groom had arrived in Bali. They found a note that he wrote to his family, saying he would carry out a suicide mission and that the family would be reunited in paradise, said Ansyaad Mbai, who heads Indonesia’s anti-terrorism agency.
Security forces killed five suspects who were believed to be plotting a series of armed robberies in Bali to fund their terrorist activities. The groom himself escaped, and it is unclear what attack he had planned or whether he will still attempt it.
Additional reporting by Staff writer
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