Business Standard

Southeast Asia-Australia pact to target terrorists’ digital messages

- JASON SCOTT & MATTHEW BURGESS BLOOMBERG

Terrorists operating in Southeast Asia will be targeted in a pan-regional pact designed to enhance intelligen­ce sharing and disrupt potential attackers’ ability to communicat­e through digital messaging.

“Terrorism is a truly global threat, as digital as it is dangerous,” Australian Prime Minister Malcolm Turnbull said on Saturday at the signing of a counter-terrorism memorandum of understand­ing at his country’s special summit with Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations leaders in Sydney. “The use of social media and encrypted messaging applicatio­ns is a challenge for us all, and one we must tackle together.”

The nations committed to improve legislativ­e and enforcemen­t tools to combat the cross-border movement of extremists, including obtaining and using electronic communicat­ions evidence for prosecutio­ns. They also pledged to increase legislativ­e efforts to boost counter-terrorism financing and informatio­nsharing between members.

The move comes as concern in Southeast Asia grows about the influence of ISISinspir­ed terrorists returning from the Middle East, with Indonesia and Philippine­s seen by some experts as vulnerable to further attacks. Australia, a key ally of the U.S., is also on high alert with the likelihood of an attack deemed probable. Intelligen­ce services there have disrupted or stopped at least a dozen major terrorism plots since 2014.

The Summit’s counter-terrorism conference is designed to bring regional intelligen­ce agencies and policy-makers together to strengthen crossborde­r efforts to crack down on terrorism financing and planning.

“The use of encrypted messaging apps by terrorists and criminals is potentiall­y the most significan­t degradatio­n of intelligen­ce capability in modern times,” Australia’s Home Affairs Minister Peter Dutton told the meeting on Saturday.

Dutton is leading attempts to pass legislatio­n in Australia’s parliament that he says will make communicat­ions companies pass on potential terrorism-related messages to intelligen­ce agencies, and boost authoritie­s’ ability to use surveillan­ce devices.

“We all have a vested interest in each other defeating terrorist movements wherever they arise,” Turnbull said. “Just as the terrorists’ networks are transnatio­nal, so must be our collaborat­ion, and nowhere more so than in the sharing of intelligen­ce.”

The pact is one of the core objectives of the special summit between Asean and Australia, which has been organised at Turnbull’s behest to enhance regional economic and security ties. Leaders of the nations will meet on Sunday.

The nations committed to improve legislativ­e and enforcemen­t tools to combat the cross-border movement of extremists

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