The Cairns Post

Murderous terrorists use charities to recruit

- NATALIE O’BRIEN

THE terrorist group behind the Bali bombings remains active and is expanding while fundraisin­g for recruits to go to jihadist training camps in Syria.

Jemaah Islamyiah (JI) is expanding again and quietly building up a mass membership base.

The extremist group’s activities have come under the spotlight again after Indonesia’s anti-terror police strike force, known as Desus 88, confiscate­d hundreds of charity donation boxes and disrupted a number of “educationa­l and humanitari­an” charities.

The police raids, which revealed JI had received a small fortune in donations, come after police earlier this year shot dead one of the charity heads and a JI-suspect known as Dr Sunardi.

The chilling revelation­s contained in a report, Extremist Charities and Terrorist Fund-raising in Indonesia, warn charities have evolved to serve as an important source of funding for violent extremist organisati­ons in Indonesia like JI and other ISISlinked extremist groups.

Institute for Policy Analysis of Conflict Security senior adviser Sidney Jones said the fundraisin­g methods were not new but the massive scale of it was.

Ms Jones said extremist organisati­ons use similar methods, identifyin­g a humanitari­an need; giving it a religious justificat­ion; raising funds as broadly as possible; claiming transparen­cy by periodical­ly publishing accounts; and then diverting funds for jihad and support to arrested members.

The report showed JI had used the funds to organise meetings, start businesses, support prisoner families and hide fugitives as well as pay expenses of sending members to jihadist training camps in Syria.

JI was behind the 2002 and 2005 Bali bombings as well as a string of other terrorist attacks including the 2004 at

tacks on the JW Marriott Hotel and the Australian Embassy in Jakarta.

One of the former heads of JI, who spent a year in jail and now runs deradicali­sation programs, Nasir Abbas, said the government and police must remain vigilant so similar attacks don’t happen again.

“Until now, we see that many invitation­s to do radicalism act … still exist. We can still hear and read it anywhere. If we don’t take action to prevent this, it would be dangerous. Some day, the desire to do ‘something’ will appear,” Mr Abbas said.

But despite JI’s active fund raising and membership efforts

experts such as Chair in Global Islamic Politics at Deakin University Professor Greg Barton (pictured) said we are very unlikely to be surprised by a major attack around the time of the Bali bombing anniversar­y – but it not impossible.

Professor Barton said JI is resilient but keeping “their heads down” but he believes the bigger threat may be from members aligned with ISIS.

“I don’t think any group has the will or the capacity to do another attack on the 20th anniversar­y,” Prof Barton said.

“JI doesn’t want to risk it … the caveat is that there may be younger more impatient elements. But the real threat is a lone actor.”

Professor Rohan Gunaratna, Professor of Security Studies at the S. Rajaratnam School of Internatio­nal Studies, Nanyang Technology University, Singapore, said Detachment 88 has been very effective neutralisi­ng threats and have arrested hundreds of people.

But he warned terror cells and networks still exist and government­s can’t afford to be complacent.

“Detachment 88 has been waging a relentless operation against JI, but there have been some setbacks – the return of the Taliban and ISIS in Afghanista­n,” said Professor Gunaratna.

 ?? ?? Australian forensic investigat­ors at the site of the deadly October 2002 Bali bombing that killed 202 people, including 88 Australian­s.
Australian forensic investigat­ors at the site of the deadly October 2002 Bali bombing that killed 202 people, including 88 Australian­s.

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