Indonesia to hold jihadist-terror survivor meeting
JAKARTA (AFP) — A landmark reconciliation meeting between survivors of terror attacks and the perpetrators will be held in Indonesia this month, Jakarta said Monday.
The meeting, announced by chief security minister Wiranto, is being touted as a first for Muslim-majority Indonesia, which has long struggled with Islamist militancy and attacks.
“This meeting is quite unique — it has not ever happened before,” Wiranto, who like many Indonesians goes only by one name, told reporters in the capital Jakarta.
People currently incarcerated for terror-related offenses and ex-convicts will get the chance to apologize to survivors at the meeting, he said.
The government did not release the names of the militants or the survivors, and it was not clear for how long or where the two groups would meet. It also did not say if any family members of those killed in such attacks would participate.
Indonesia, which has the world’s biggest Muslim population, has suffered a string of extremist attacks in the past 16 years, including the 2002 Bali bombings that killed 202 people, mostly foreign tourists.
A crackdown has weakened the most dangerous networks, but fears have grown of a resurgence in militancy after hundreds of Indonesians flocked to the Middle East and the Philippines in recent years to join the Islamic State group.