The Jerusalem Post

Malaysian teacher seen as new ‘emir’ of pro-ISIS terrorists

- • By ROZANNA LATIFF and JOSEPH SIPALAN (Reuters)

KUALA LUMPUR (Reuters) – The battlefiel­d deaths of two leaders of an Islamic State alliance in the southern Philippine­s could thrust a Malaysian who trained at an al-Qaida camp in Afghanista­n as the terrorist group’s new regional “emir,” experts and officials say.

Intelligen­ce officials describe Malaysian Mahmud Ahmad as a financier and recruiter, who helped put together the coalition of pro-Islamic State fighters that stormed Marawi City in May.

Isnilon Hapilon, Islamic State’s anointed “emir” in Southeast Asia, and Omarkhayam Maute, one of two Middle East educated brothers at the helm of the terrorist alliance, were killed in a raid on a building in Marawi and their bodies recovered on Monday, Philippine Defense Secretary Delfin Lorenzana said.

Philippine authoritie­s said they were still searching for Mahmud.

“Based on our informatio­n, there is still one personalit­y, Dr. Mahmud of Malaysia, and he is still in the main battle area with some Indonesian­s and Malaysians,” military chief Gen. Eduardo Ano said on Monday. “But their attitude is now different; they are no longer as aggressive as before.” He did not elaborate.

Ano urged the 30 insurgents remaining in a shrinking combat zone to surrender and free hostages as troops stepped up their fight.

Abdullah Maute, the alliance’s military commander, was reportedly killed in August, though no body was found.

Intelligen­ce officials in Malaysia believe Mahmud left Marawi months ago.

Malaysia’s police counterter­rorism chief Ayob Khan Mydin Pitchay told Reuters in July that Mahmud “managed to sneak out from Marawi city to another safe place with his followers”.

The 39-year-old Mahmud, who holds a doctorate in religious studies and was a university lecturer in Kuala Lumpur, was Hapilon’s second in command in the Islamic State’s Southeast Asia “caliphate”, according to a July report by Indonesia-based Institute of Policy Analysis and Conflict (IPAC).

Sitting in the inner circle of the Marawi command center, Mahmud controlled recruitmen­t and financing, the IPAC report said.

He was the contact for foreigners wanting to join the fight in the Philippine­s or with ISIS in the Middle East, it said.

“It wasn’t just Indonesian­s and Malaysians contacting Dr. Mahmud... he was also the contact for Bangladesh­is in Malaysia who wanted to join the fighting in Mindanao,” IPAC director Sidney Jones told Reuters.

Rohan Gunaratna, an analyst at the S. Rajaratnam School of Internatio­nal Studies in Singapore, described Mahmud as “the most important ISIS leader in Southeast Asia”.

Ahmad el-Muhammady, a lecturer at the Internatio­nal Islamic University of Malaysia and a counterter­rorism adviser to the police, said Mahmud often solicited funds for Islamic State operations.

“He’s always the one asking people, ‘Does anyone have any money they’d like to donate?’” he said, “and he will usually reply when followers in the region ask him about the situation in the Philippine­s.”

Mahmud grew up in Batu Caves, a crowded Kuala Lumpur suburb, famous for a Hindu temple housed in a large complex of caverns. Mahmud’s wife and three children were last known to be living there, although Reuters could not locate them.

Before leaving Malaysia in 2014, Mahmud taught young Muslim students at a tahfiz, a school to memorize the Koran, in Nakhoda, a village near Batu Caves, residents said. “When he [Mahmud] started the school, he did stay there for the first one or two years, but then he just disappeare­d,” said 50-yearold Zainon Mat Arshad, a Nakhoda resident who went to the mosque where Mahmud prayed.

“When he was at the tahfiz school, he kept mostly to himself, and if he had come over to pray on Friday, I don’t think anyone would have recognized him,” he said. “He didn’t mingle with the local community.”

Security experts say Mahmud studied at Pakistan’s Islamabad Islamic University in the late 1990s before going to Afghanista­n where he learned to make improvised explosive devices at an al-Qaida camp.

In 2000, he returned to Malaysia to get a doctorate, which earned him a post as a lecturer in the Islamic Studies faculty at the University of Malaysia in Kuala Lumpur.

Former students described Mahmud as a quiet person who kept to himself.

“He wasn’t the kind of lecturer who hung out at cafes with his students as some others did,” said one former student who declined to be identified.

The few signs of his extremist beliefs were discovered later, including a book he wrote on jihad under his nom de guerre, Abu Handzalah, said Ahmad, the Internatio­nal Islamic University of Malaysia lecturer.

He was put on Malaysia’s most wanted list in April 2014 after leaving the country with several others, including his aide, a Malaysian bomb maker named Mohammad Najib Husen, to work with the Abu Sayyaf group, notorious for violent kidnapping­s and beheadings in the southern Philippine­s, Ahmad said.

Mahmud received funding for the Marawi operation directly from ISIS headquarte­rs, through the group’s Southeast Asian unit led by Syrian-based Indonesian terrorist Bahrumsyah, the IPAC report said.

In a video released by the Philippine­s army in June, Mahmud is seen alongside Hapilon as well as Omarkhayam and Abdullah Maute – the pair of brothers who orchestrat­ed the Marawi siege.

 ??  ?? SOLDIERS DISTRIBUTE pictures of a member of the terrorist group Abu Sayyaf Isnilon Hapilon, who has a US government bounty of $5 million for his capture, in the southern Philippine­s earlier this year.
SOLDIERS DISTRIBUTE pictures of a member of the terrorist group Abu Sayyaf Isnilon Hapilon, who has a US government bounty of $5 million for his capture, in the southern Philippine­s earlier this year.

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