Ross B. Taylor AM
August in Bali is almost ‘perfect’. Endless sunny days
and every evening thousands of tourists - including many of the 850,000
Australians who now flock to Bali annually – gather at Kuta and Legian beaches
to watch the glorious Bali sun sink slowly into the ocean near Java.
Yet disturbingly, there are storm clouds also
gathering west of Bali as a new wave of potential terrorism returns to
Indonesia, and our doorstep.
This year has seen the approval for the release of
over 100 convicted Bali-bombing terrorists and their ‘helpers’ from Indonesian
jails. But even more worrying, the recent events in Iraq and Syria have seen increasing
numbers of young Indonesians answering the call to create what the emerging and
extremely violent jihadist group IS (Islamic State) call a Caliphate; a demand for all Muslims to help
establish a Pan-Islamic State.
Bring these events together at a time where many young
Australians are visiting Bali for the first time, and disturbingly, attitudes
towards holidaying in our ‘paradise island’ have softened to a point whereby
most Australians don’t even think about security issues any more.
Within Indonesia, the Iraq-based IS followers have many political and
religious leaders deeply concerned. Already our government has warned of the
threat to mainland Australia from returning Australian passport holders who
have been fighting in the Middle East. But the threat from Indonesians
returning from Iraq and Syria as hardened terrorists is perhaps an even greater
threat.
It is estimated that at least 100-150 Indonesian
Muslim extremists are now actively engaged with IS in Iraq and Syria. Simultaneously, the radical Islamic cleric,
Abu Bakar Bashir, has sent a rallying call to his ‘true believers’ from a jail
cell in Java (where he is serving a 17 year jail sentence for his involvement
in the Bali bombings in 2002 and 2005) to join in the Caliphate in the Middle East; and the World.
IS
has
used the term Caliphate in an effort to
appeal to, and deceive, a broader cross-section of Muslims’ on the basis that
they are only calling for the establishment of an Islamic State rather than the
promotion of the jihad violence as used by Al
Qaeda and the Indonesian-based Jemaah
Islamiyah (JI) in attacks on the World Trade Centre and in Bali.
This strategy by IS
shows signs of failing, due to the shocking murder and mutilation of thousands
of Christians and Shiite Muslims in the Middle East by their followers. The positive news for Australia is
that the vast majority of Muslims in both
Indonesia and Australia are vigorously opposed to IS and their use of Islam to inflict appalling crimes on innocent
people of all religions.
Recently, the Indonesian
Ulema Council (MUI) decreed a ‘Fatwa’ (a Religious Order or Opinion)
against IS, and over 3,000 followers
of Abu Bakar Bashir’s Jamaah Ansharut
Tauid (JAT) have quit the organisation over the actions of IS and their followers.
In Australia, Prime Minister Tony Abbott has moved, albeit
clumsily, to soften his government’s plan to amend race-hate laws – a move that
has been strongly opposed by religious and ethnic groups – in order to ‘clear
the air’ with Muslim leaders whose support Abbott needs in stopping the spread
and attraction of IS amongst young
Australian Muslim men.
But to ensure Australians remain immune from another
terrorist attack similar that which devastated the lives of so many Australians
in 2002 and 2005, Australia and Indonesia will have to work together to address
this potentially dangerous expansion of IS
in our region.
The Australian
Federal Police (AFP) and the Indonesian
National Police (POLRI) have an outstanding joint record in dealing with
terror-related activities. POLRI used
the sophisticated skills of our AFP
to bring to justice most of the Bali bombers. And ironically, Australia’s
spying agencies probably have played a key role in providing the Indonesia
authorities with information about terrorist activities.
The new Indonesian president, Joko ‘Jokowi’ Widodo, will
be sworn in during October, and he has a
good record of dealing with complex and sensitive matters including terrorist
activities, having been the mayor of the central Java city of Solo; a ‘hot-bed’
for extremists. Jokowi knows that an extremist Sunni Muslim organisation such
as IS, who has committed brutal acts
against fellow-Shiite Muslims, presents a potential threat to Indonesia’s
stability and good record of religious tolerance.
Jokowi also knows that the biggest ‘weapon’
Indonesia has in defeating the IS
activities within Indonesia, is its successful democracy, economis prosperity and religious tolerance. Notwithstanding this, he will
still be keen to maintain and develop close anti-terrorist links between Jakarta
and Canberra.
Mutual co-operation in the early days of the Jokowi
presidency over terrorism issues could also provide the catalyst for broader
and closer relationships between our two countries, despite the president
predicted to be very domestically focused.
In the meantime, for Australians heading off the
Bali, the good news is Bali is a far safer place than in 2002 when 88
Australians lost their lives in one terrible night. But the rise of IS, and the attraction of young
Indonesian and Australian men to fight for the Caliphate, is an ominous warning for us all: We need to be vigilant
at all times and need to understand that over the months and years ahead, the
terrorist risk to Australians travelling in our region, and at home, will
increase.
1 Comments
Really interesting yet scary article. Thank you for explaining what is happening in the Islamic world so clearly as to allow an 'average' bloke here in the USA understand. Much appreciated.
ReplyDeleteRoger Hadfield. San Antonio
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