The Advertiser [Australia], 30 June 2007
"Not All JI Are Terrorists"
Sidney Jones in The Advertiser (Australia)
For most in Australia, the name Jemaah Islamiah will be forever linked to the horrors
of the first
Bali bomb in which 88 Australians died. But to brand all JI members as evil incarnate
is to suggest that the only real counter-terrorism option is to cast the net as wide as
possible and lock up all suspects for ever. That's what might be called the
''Guantanamo option'' - and it won't work.
Why? Because people have joined JI for different reasons, and some can be
dissuaded from using violence; because the biggest threat of more attacks may come
from outside JI; because prisons can be a radicalising element; and because
Indonesia is a democracy where less corruption and more justice may be as effective
a means of fighting terror as police and spy satellites.
JI is a dangerous organisation because it promotes an ideology that condones
violence against Islam's enemies in the struggle to establish Islamic law. Towards that
end it seeks to amass weapons and give members military training to prepare for the
coming battle. But many members do not support indiscriminate violence against
civilians and reject the notion that al-Qaida-style attacks on Indonesian soil are an
appropriate response to the deaths of Muslims in Afghanistan, Iraq and elsewhere.
Many would have opposed the first Bali bombings if they had known about the plans:
not even every member of the JI central command was in on the secret. The next
three major bombings - the Marriott Hotel, the Australian Embassy and Bali II - were
effectively the work of a splinter group led by Noordin Mohamed Top. If Noordin and
his opponents are lumped together as equally bad, the opportunity to use the
influence of the less extreme against the more extreme is lost.
Not everyone is equally committed to the cause, but any hope of rehabilitation is
undermined from the outset if anyone accused of terrorism is considered beyond
redemption. In late March, 16 convicted terrorists - not JI - were moved from Ambon to
Bali because local authorities found that some ordinary criminals had been recruited
into jihadist ranks.
Of those moved, perhaps four were doing the recruiting. The others included young
Ambonese who indeed had been involved in attacks but who would benefit more from
structured vocational training programs than from being thrown together with hardcore
ideologues who could make them far more radical than they are now. Some young
men were caught up in operations reluctantly but felt it was a betrayal of their friends
to pull out; others joined because they were persuaded it was a way of showing
solidarity with persecuted Muslims around the world. Many of these men need to be
seen not as steelyeyed killers but as individuals who could use some guidance.
At the same time, the ideology that teaches hatred of the U.S. and its allies is not
going to go away any time soon. It is true that U.S. policies, from Iraq to various
aspects of the war on terror to one-sided support of Israel, help keep it alive, but very
few of the millions exposed to jihadism on the internet or through religious study
sessions become terrorists.
In Indonesia, the factors used to explain terrorism elsewhere don't apply: the country
is not under occupation and it doesn't suppress Islamic political parties. Those who
join JI and other organisations are not a persecuted minority or alienated immigrant
group.
In Ambon and Poso, two areas where bitter Christian-Muslim fighting took place in the
years following Suharto's resignation, unresolved grievances kept young men engaged
in jihadi violence long after the sectarian strife had ended.
Address those grievances, and the ideology's attraction diminishes. That's not the
case in Java, where a network of JI schools (some 20 out of a total of 30,000 schools,
so the Islamic school system is not the problem) continues to produce a new
generation of potential recruits, and where the increasing reluctance of JI leaders to
sanction attacks is pushing some hotheads into the arms of more radical groups.
But even there, one recent graduate confessed he had no skills, and the only thing he
was trained to do was teach in another JI school. It might be worthwhile to engage the
local business community to set up onthe- job training programs to offer alternative
prospects.
Some say the problem in Indonesia is democracy and that there was no terrorism
under Suharto. But virtually all the men who later became JI leaders first joined a
banned group called Darul Islam in the late 1970s and early 1980s as a protest
against Suharto and went to Afghanistan to get the wherewithal to fight him.
Authoritarianism produced JI, not democracy. Now the task is to reduce corruption
and make the Government more responsive. Those who see victory in the recent
arrests of two top JI leaders should remember that in the early 1980s, virtually the
entire leadership of Darul Islam was arrested.
It did not kill the organisation. Instead, in 1993, it produced JI.
Sidney JONES
* She is the South-East Asia project director for International Crisis Group, based in
Jakarta, Indonesia. She reports on the sources of conflict and violence in the region
and is an authority on Islamic radicalism and the rise of Jemaah Islamiah.
* She has been the Asia director for Human Rights Watch and researcher for
Amnesty International.
* A guest of the Adelaide Festival of Ideas, she will take part in a panel discussion,
''The bubble-wrap age: are we protecting ourselves too much?'', next Saturday night in
Elder Hall, as well as other sessions.
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