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Radical Muslim group revives paramilitary wing

Source
Radio Australia - February 28, 2003

In Indonesia, a radical Muslim group has announced its reviving its paramilitary wing. The Laskhar FPI of the Islamic Defenders Front is known for its raids on nightclubs and alcohol vendors as part of a crackdown on what it describes as dens of sin and immorality. The group disbanded last November but has now re-opened for registration for both old and new members.

Presenter/Interviewer: Kanaha Sabapathy

Speakers: Sidney Jones, Indonesia project director for the International Crisis Group; Ulil Abshar Abdalla, coordinator of the Liberal Islamic Network, Habib Rizieq Syihab, leader of the Islamic Defenders Front

Sabapathy: Formed in 1998 the Islamic Defenders Front or FPI has developed a reputation for attacking bars, nightclubs and gambling venues. Entertainment venues deemed un-Islamic have often been targetted and its most prominent raid was that on Jakarta's Chinatown last May.

But following the Bali bombing of last October the FPI along with the more militant Laskar Jihad disbanded in the face of growing public criticism. So why has the group chosen to regroup and rearm its paramilitary wing now? This is Habib Rizieq Syihab the leader of the FPI.

Syihab: "The armed wing of FPI was made non-active or frozen some time ago for the purpose of evaluation and reorganisation. Now that we see that this process of evaluation and reorganisation during the past four months has run fairly well we start to do it at the grassroots level. That's why since Sunday we have reopened for registration and screening of new recruits."

Sabapathy: Unlike other militant groups like the Lashkar Jihad and the Jemma Islamiah the FPI has never called for an Islamic state ... but rather has called for a strict adherence to the Sharia laws.

While this may be the case, Sidney Jones the Indonesian project director of the International Crisis Group sees its activites as those of an urban criminal gang with an Islamic veneer.

Jones: "They have had a history of attacking nightclubs and discoteques but using sticks to basically smash things up, they don't usually attack people, they attack buildings and property and often make off with the proceeds of the cash register. But it's much more an urban criminal gang in some ways with an Islamic veneer."

Abdalla: I must say that this is a criminal group, they're concerned about prostitution, about the gambling, about the nightclubs, about the drugs, but the problem is that they deal with it badly."

Sabapathy: Ulil Abshar Abdalla is the coordinator of the Liberal Islamic Network. He says it's the failure of the government to address these social issues that led to the rise of the FPI.

Abdalla: "Just due to the inability of the government to deal with this kind of problem, so it is a reaction of the people while are impatient in looking at the problem unsolved there."

Jones: "What they tried to do is to eradicate vice in the name of Islam but there are a lot of allegations that they don't go after some places that are well known to be frequented by police for example."

Sabapathy: Following the events of September 11 ... the world has focused on the activities of militant Islamic groups. The Bali bombing last October brought their destructive activities closer home ... and now with war looming in Iraq ... should we be concerned with the regrouping and rearming of the FPI? Mr Abdalla believes not.

Abdalla: "I doubt that they can rearm themselves here, again because there is no support whatsoever from the people now."

Sabapathy: But what about external support?

Abdalla: "You see FPI is not linked to any international supporter because FPI is different from Laskar Jihad and MMI. MMI and Laskar Jihad is pretty linked to the outside group, but FPI is merely an indigenous group."

Sabapathy: Sidney Jones agrees that the FPI is not a terrorist organisation ... but she sees the group becoming a nuisance factor as Indonesia goes into elections next year. She believes the FPI could leave itself open to manipulation by other parties for very local political ends.

Jones: "I don't think that necessarily there's a linkage between this remobilisation and the war in Iraq. But this is a group that will be active in demonstrations in Jakarta and other cities if there is a war in Iraq."

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