TERROR IN INDONESIA
Indonesia witnessed many several attacks
during the last decade. A multiple terror attacks in Jakarta, , which left at
least seven dead, mark the return of organised Islamist violence to the country
after a brief period. In 2002 Bali bombing that killed over 200 people. Most of
such attacks were carried out by the home-grown terrorist group, Jemaah
Islamiyah, which has links with al-Qaeda. An effective military campaign
against the JI by the government, along with U.S.-model counter-terror strategies,
helped Indonesia break up the extremist network and arrest the tide of terror
strikes. But Thursday’s attack, the first major terror assault in the country
in six years, has rekindled fears that extremists are regrouping themselves at
a time when it is going through a tough economic phase. Indonesia has blamed
Islamic State for the attack. The apparent target of the attackers was a
downtown mall with outlets of Starbucks and Burger King, as well as a
diplomatic quarter in Jakarta. It’s evident that the attackers wanted to
inflict maximum damage, much the same way the Bali tourist hotspot was
attacked. But the plan didn’t succeed, according to initial reports, as the
gunmen were stopped at the mall and sent back to a police post, where they
opened fire.
Though major attacks
were halted after the Malaysian leader of the JI was killed in a shootout in
rural Indonesia in 2009, Jakarta has stepped up security measures in recent
times in the wake of growing Islamist challenges. If militants radicalised at
home and trained in Afghanistan posed security challenges in 2000-09, now
radicalised youth get military training in Syria and Iraq. Up to 700
Indonesians are estimated to have travelled to Syria and Iraq to join Islamic
State. The government has expressed concern that their return would reinforce
the broken extremist networks, bringing back another phase of organised
violence. There was a massive crackdown on suspected Islamists on New Year's
eve. For the Islamists, Indonesia has always been a high-stakes game. Though
their influence among Indonesian society is negligible and their networks were
broken up by the state, the latest attacks show they still possess the
capability to hit life. It is bad news for the government of President Joko
Widodo, which faces the challenge of rejuvenating an economy hit by a slowdown
and falling commodity prices. Mr. Widodo, who came to power in 2014, has been
trying to portray Indonesia as a peaceful, stable place to attract investments
to fund growth. Terror attacks would certainly make his job harder. A bigger
challenge is to prevent the return of attacks along the model of the last
decade. To stop Islamists making inroads into the world’s largest Muslim
society, the government has to take on both the extremist organisations and the
extremists’ ideas. President Widodo should not let Islamists have their way.( Ref: Hindu )
Prof. John Kurakar
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