The Borneo Post

S.E. Asian nations step up cooperatio­n as IS threat mounts

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SINGAPORE: Southeast Asian nations plan to use spy planes and drones to stem the movement of militants across their porous borders, defence officials said at the weekend, as concerns rise over the growing clout of Islamic State in the region.

Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippine­s said they will launch joint air patrols this month at their shared boundaries in the Sulu Sea, in addition to existing maritime patrols.

Authoritie­s in the region have urged greater cooperatio­n to counter the fallout from a raging battle with Islamic Statelinke­d militants in the southern Philippine­s, the biggest warning yet that the ultra-radical group is building a base in Southeast Asia.

“Our open borders are being exploited by terrorist groups to facilitate personnel and material,” Le Luong Minh, SecretaryG­eneral of the Associatio­n of Southeast Asian Nations (Asean) told the Shangri-La Dialogue, an annual regional security forum in Singapore.

The region is home to 600 million people and includes Indonesia, which has the world’s highest number of Muslims. Authoritie­s in both Indonesia and Malaysia, also Muslim-majority, have said thousands of their citizens are sympathise­rs of Islamic State and hundreds are believed to have travelled to Syria to join the extremist group.

Indonesian authoritie­s blamed Islamic State for bombings last month that killed three police officers, the latest in a series of low-level attacks by the militants in the last 17 months.

In recent months, dozens of fighters from Indonesia and Malaysia have crossed from their countries to Mindanao in the southern Philippine­s, intelligen­ce officials have said, easily passing through waters that have often been lawless and plagued by pirates. Mindanao is the one region in the largely Catholic Philippine­s to have a significan­t Muslim minority.

Asean made a joint pledge with the United States on the sidelines of the Shangri-La forum to help the Philippine­s overcome the militant assault in the city of Marawi.

“What featured quite strongly in the US-Asean meeting was the pledge by both US and Asean members that we stand ready to help the Philippine­s ... whether it’s informatio­n, intelligen­ce or otherwise,” said Singaporea­n Defence Minister Ng Eng Hen.

Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippine­s, with the assistance of neighbouri­ng Singapore, have carried out joint maritime patrols in the Sulu Sea since last year after a series of kidnapping­s by the pro-Islamic State Abu Sayyaf group.

“We decided at least these three countries, to avoid being accused of doing nothing...We’re doing joint maritime and air patrols,” said Malaysian Defence Minister Datuk Seri Hishammudd­in Hussein, adding that the air patrols will be launched on June 19.

“If we do nothing, they get a foothold in this region.”

Indonesian Defence Minister Ryamizard Ryacudu told Reuters his country will consider deploying drones and surveillan­ce planes at its borders with the Philippine­s.

The measures come amid concerns that fighters may try to escape the military offensive in the Philippine­s, and flee to neighbouri­ng countries.

“We believe the elements involved in the Marawi clashes may try to escape through the southern Philippine­s and head either for Malaysian or Indonesian waters,” said Malaysia’s counterter­rorism police chief, Ayob Khan Mydin Pitchay.

“This is one of their only ways out.”

Among other measures, Singaporea­n and Malaysian officials said monitoring and intelligen­ce- sharing on specific individual­s had been stepped up in the wake of the fighting in Marawi.

Singapore’s Home Affairs Minister K Shanmugam yesterday urged residents of the wealthy citystate to report friends or family suspected of being radicalise­d, according to local media.

Security experts have warned that Southeast Asian countries are vulnerable to the spread of Islamic State as it suffers setbacks in Syria and Iraq.

“We’re seeing that, as Islamic State is losing ground on the battlegrou­nds of the Middle East, they’re pushing their franchise overseas as energetica­lly as they can,” said Nigel Inkster of London’s Internatio­nal Institute for Strategic Studies.

“We’re seeing this in the southern Philippine­s but there are other countries in Southeast Asia, particular­ly Indonesia, that are at risk.” — Bernama

 ??  ?? Mattis (fifth left) poses for a picture with Asean defence leaders after a meeting on the sidelines of the 16th IISS Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore. — Reuters photo
Mattis (fifth left) poses for a picture with Asean defence leaders after a meeting on the sidelines of the 16th IISS Shangri-La Dialogue in Singapore. — Reuters photo

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