Business World

SE Asian nations vow ties vs ‘growing’ IS threat

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MANADO, INDONESIA — Southeast Asian nations will cooperate more closely with intelligen­ce and law enforcemen­t authoritie­s from the Middle East amid “grave concerns” about an elevated threat from Islamic State (IS) in the region.

Representa­tives from four Southeast Asian nations, Australia and New Zealand met in the Indonesian city of Manado on Saturday to develop a response to the increased danger posed by IS, highlighte­d by the occupation of parts of the southern Philippine city of Marawi by militants owing allegiance to the group.

The battle has sparked alarm that as IS suffers reversals in Iraq and Syria, it is seeking to create a stronghold in the region, buttressed by Southeast Asian fighters returning from the Middle East and other militants inspired by the ultra-radical group and the Marawi conflict.

Describing the regional threat from Islamist militants as growing and rapidly evolving, a joint statement by the participan­ts called for enhanced informatio­n sharing, as well as cooperatio­n on border control, deradicali­zation, law reform and countering Islamists’ prolific use of social media to plan attacks and lure recruits.

“We must face the threat together,” said Wiranto, Indonesia’s coordinati­ng minister for security.

The meeting was co-hosted by Indonesia and Australia. The other participan­ts were Malaysia, the Philippine­s, Brunei and New Zealand.

The main initiative was a law enforcemen­t dialogue to be co-hosted by the Indonesian and Australian police forces in August bringing together key stakeholde­rs affected by IS.

Two senior law enforcemen­t sources at the Manado meeting said countries from the Middle East, including Turkey, would attend the summit to kick off cooperatio­n across the two regions.

Islamic State has a dedicated military unit made up of hundreds of Southeast Asian fighters in Syria and Iraq led by Indonesian militant Bahrumsyah.

According to Indonesian police, there are 510 Indonesian supporters of Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, including 113 women.

About 20 Islamist fighters from Indonesia are believed by counter-terrorism authoritie­s to be fighting in Marawi, a predominan­tly Muslim city in the southern island of Mindanao, which has been a hotbed of Islamist unrest for decades and a magnet for militants from around the region.

One of leaders of the militants in Marawi is a Malaysian Islamic studies lecturer, Ahmad Mahmud, who arranged financing and the recruitmen­t of foreign fighters.

POOR RECORD OF COOPERATIO­N

While the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations, the multilater­al regional forum made up of 10 nations, has long had a framework for cooperatio­n on combating violent extremism, analysts and officials say coordinati­on has been poor.

A report last week from the Jakartabas­ed Institute for Policy Analysis of Conflict identified “formidable obstacles” to greater cooperatio­n between Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippine­s, the frontline states facing the Islamist threat in Southeast Asia.

“These include the deep-seated political distrust between the Philippine­s and Malaysia that impedes informatio­n sharing; concern from Indonesia and Malaysia police about mixed loyalties of local counterpar­ts in Mindanao, especially given clan and family links; and institutio­nal disjunctur­es that give the lead in counter-terrorism to the police in Indonesia and Malaysia but to the military in the Philippine­s,” the report said.

After more than two months of intense fighting, IS-aligned militants still control part of Marawi. Over 600 people have been killed, including 45 civilians and 114 members of the security forces. The government has said the other dead are militants. —

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