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THE BAD GUYS
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More al Qaeda & Jemaah Islamiyah linksNew Picture Emerges of
Militant Network In Southeast Asia – Jemaah Islamiyah Aided al Qaeda, But Has
it's Own Agenda: Islamic State” which quoted South East Asian security
officials that Jemaah Islamiyah, an organized network of Islamic militants
with a history of violence and which had a role in the September 11 attacks
on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon, has as its chief aim the setting
up of a Caliphate, or pan-Islamic state linking Indonesia, Malaysia and the
southern Muslim islands of the Philippines. Information security officials
obtained during months of investigation and hundreds of hours of
interrogating detained terrorist suspects, the disturbing picture emerges
that Southeast Asian militants known to have worked with al Qaeda are
members of a separate, organized network – Jemaah Islamiyah. Locking up Osama bin Laden and disbanding al Qaeda
wouldn’t necessarily reduce the danger posed by Jemaah Islamiyah, which owes
much of its present form to a one-time al Qaeda operative and yet remains
independent of Osama bin Laden’s organization. The report said: Jemaah Islamiyah’s members are believed to have
played key roles assisting al Qaeda terrorists, including arranging
accommodation for a visit to Malaysia in 2000 by two of the men who hijacked
the American Airline jetliner that crashed into the Pentagon. “Jemaah Islamiyah’s fingerprints are also showing up in
a range of violent incidents across the region that once were thought to be
unconnected, say regional officials. These include a Manila train bombing
in December 2000 that killed 22 people, the assassination of a Malaysian
politician in November 2000, arms shipments to Muslim militants fighting
Christians in Indonesia’s Molucca Islands and a foiled plot to blow up the
U.S. and Israeli embassies in Singapore that led to mass arrests in
Singapore and Malaysia last December.” Jemaah Islamiyah was envisaged as a stand-alone organization in Southeast Asia that would, on occasion, co-operate with al Qaeda and other Islamic groups and has three geographic divisions of responsibility referred to as Mantiqi, “a name whose meaning is unclear”. The three Mantiqi divisions co-ordinate closely on explosives training, weapons smuggling and other business ventures to fund their activities. Mantiqi 1, which focused on peninsular Malaysia and Singapore, was led by Riduan Isamuddin, also known as Hambali, “an experienced al Qaeda foot soldier”. Mantiqi 2 focussed on Indonesia’s Java island while Mantiqi 3 administers operations in Mandanao, Sabah and Indonesia’s Sulawesi. Jemaah Islamiyah first flexed its muscles “as a regional power” in 1999, when it established a private army to help Muslims fighting Christians for control of the Moluccas in eastern Indonesia, recruiting Muslims from elsewhere in Indonesia, Malaysia and the Philippines. These recruits were sent to military training camps, one in the central island of Sulawesi and another in Mindanao, before being dispatched for battle in the Moluccas. Typical of the firepower on offer was a huge cache of M-16 automatic rifles seized in early 2000 by a Malaysian marine police unit patrolling the waters of Sabah. Regional intelligence officials confirmed this previously unreported seizure of arms and say the intended recipients were Muslim groups fighting in the Moluccas.’ Jemaah Islamiyah next embarked on a more ambitious operation against the Philippine government, and three separate meetings were held in Malaysia in June 2000 by Jemaah Islamiyah leaders to plot the their attacks, which resulted: On August 1, 2000, a bomb exploded outside the home of Manila’s ambassador to Indonesia, killing two people and severely injuring the diplomat. On December 30, 2000, another bomb ripped through a computer train in Manila, killing 22 people. This is a very disturbing report and DAP calls for a Government White Paper on Kumpulan Militant Malaysia (KMM), Jemaah Islamiyah, al Qaeda, Malaysia as the US-inspired regional centre against terrorism and co-operation with United States and Australia in the war against terrorism. Everything you wanted to know about Jemaah Islamiyah and then some.
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