The Sun (Malaysia)

Indonesia detains alleged IS recruiters

> Raids nab five men suspected of trying to smuggle women, children into Syria

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JAKARTA: Indonesian anti-terror police have arrested five men who allegedly arranged for a group of mostly women and children to try and enter Syria to join the Islamic State (IS) group, an official said.

The 11 children, four women and one man, detained in the Turkish border town of Gaziantep, are the latest example of Indonesian­s heading to battlegrou­nds in the Middle East.

Fears have been growing about the influence of IS in Indonesia, which is the world’s most populous Muslim-majority nation and has long struggled with militancy. Hundreds of Indonesian­s are feared to have joined the extremists.

In a series of raids in and around Jakarta at the weekend, elite anti-terror police rounded up the five men, who are suspected of helping the 16 people who were recently caught.

The men are accused of involvemen­t in “coaching, guidance, and recruitmen­t of sympathise­rs of IS to depart to Iraq and Syria and the collection and distributi­on of funds for the activities of IS volunteers in Indonesia,” national police spokesman Rikwanto said late on Sunday.

Four were charged specifical­ly with helping arrange documents for the group to depart for Turkey, as well as previously helping another 21 Indonesian­s who went to join IS.

One of the suspects faced a separate charge of urging people to join IS on his website, as well as creating and uploading a video online of children being trained by the militants. Police did not name any of the suspects. They also confiscate­d items including nine mobile phones, eight million rupiah (RM2,200) and US$5,300 in US dollars.

The 16 recently arrested are still in detention in Turkey.

Jakarta has already banned support for IS, which controls vast swathes of territory in Iraq and Syria, although experts have called on authoritie­s to take further steps to stop the flow of fighters.

Indonesia has waged a crackdown on militant groups for more than a decade following attacks on Western targets, including the 2002 Bali bombings that killed 202 people.

The campaign has been credited with weakening key networks. – AFP

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