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The Jakarta Post


The Jakarta Post, 1/5/2006 6:32:18 PM

Terror expert says JI split into bombing faction and 'mainstream' group

SINGAPORE (AP): Terror group Jamaah Islamiyah is divided between a few dozen militants involved in bombings and a larger "mainstream" of up to 1,000 people who pose a long-term threat to Indonesia as their leaders try to regroup, an expert said Thursday.

The analysis by Sidney Jones, one of the world's leading experts on the Islamic extremist group linked to al-Qaeda, indicated that different tactics and goals exist within the organization amid intense pressure from law enforcement authorities.

At a forum in Singapore, Jones said JI militants involved in bomb plots number up to 50, and are divided into cells of five to 10 people based in central and eastern Java island.

The larger group, however, is not involved in bombings but continues to conduct military training for members and is suspected of carrying out robberies to raise funds, Jones said.

"The real issue is what's going to happen to the JI'mainstream'," she said at a forum sponsored by the Institute of Southeast Asian Studies in Singapore. "I don't think we're going to see acts of violence on the part of the JI 'mainstream' for some time to come."

She noted that Abu Rusdan, a "mainstream" leader who received militant training in Afghanistan, had been released after serving a jail term for sheltering a bomber in the deadly attacks on Bali in 2002.

Jamaah Islamiyah has been blamed for five suicide bombings targeting Western interests since 2002, the most recent on the resort island of Bali three months ago. The attacks killed more than 240 people.

Indonesian police scored a big success against Jamaah Islamiyah, or JI, in November when they killed its chief bomb-making expert, Azahari bin Husin, in a raid. But a top accomplice, Noordin Moh Top, remains a fugitive.

Jones, project director for the International Crisis Group in Jakarta, said JI's bombing faction had considered kidnapping to raise funds from ransoms or as a form of terror. She said that information came from a man who helped Noordin hide in East Javain early 2005.

At that time, Jones said, Noordin ordered a survey of possible kidnapping attempts or other attacks on Americans working at an electrical plant, a synagogue in the city of Surabaya and the ethnic Chinese owner of a mushroom processing company. No attacks were carried out, apparently because of police pressure, shesaid.

Jones said the JI "mainstream" did not share the bombing faction's tactic of terrorizing the United States and its allies with indiscriminate bombing, and that its main goal was the establishment of an Islamic state in Indonesia. While "mainstream" JI leaders distance themselves from the bombings, she said, some rank-and-file members could be supporting the moreviolent faction.

Jones noted that the JI bombing faction had tried to woo militants linked to the Muslim charity Kompak who have been involved in local conflicts such as those between Muslims and Christians in the Maluku regional capital of Ambon, and Poso on Sulawesi island.

"They have been invited to take part in bombings by the JI bombing faction, but thus far have refused," she said.

JI members have links to militants in the Philippines, but experts at the forum said there was no clear evidence that the group was involved in the Islamic insurgency in southern Thailand. (**)

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