Indonesia VP vows action against militant ideas (Reuters) Updated: 2005-11-26 13:32
Indonesia will take tough action in its newly declared war on militant ideas
that could include shutting an Islamic school co-founded by hardline jailed
cleric Abu Bakar Bashir if serious teaching deviations are found, the vice
president said on Saturday.
Jusuf Kalla said the government would soon ban a widely circulated book of
militant ideas written by one of the 2002 Bali bombers, Imam Samudra, who is on
death row.
He said that would be one of a number of steps the government and mainstream
clerics would take in response to the discovery of videos showing three suicide
bombers using Islam to justify attacks in Bali on October 1 that killed 20
people.
"There has to be two wars. Firstly, a physical war by the police and secondly
an ideological war carried out by Muslim clerics," Kalla said in an interview.
Kalla summoned Muslim clerics from all major groups to view the tapes of the
young bombers last week, prompting them to form a team to counter militant ideas
and work with the police.
He said clerics had to correct or review religious curriculum and evaluate
religious books in circulation.
The Religious Affairs Department had already been in contact with some
Islamic boarding schools about their teachings, which would be corrected, said
Kalla.
Asked about the al-Mukmin boarding school near the city of Solo, which was
co-founded by Bashir, the alleged spiritual leader of the Jemaah Islamiah
militant network, Kalla said:
"Yes al-Mukmin is certainly one that needs to be further analyzed and given
information so their curriculum will be in line with the national curriculum,"
Kalla said.
Asked if the school, where some convicted Islamic bombers have studied, could
be closed, he said that would depend on the Religious Affairs Department.
"If there are some serious (deviations), automatically it has to be (closed).
I mean serious deviations, if they have wrong teachings. It could come to that
(closure)."
He cited one example where the school's 2,000 students were not allowed to
salute the Indonesian national flag.
His comments are the strongest yet from the government against al-Mukmin,
which the International Crisis Group has described as at the top of Jemaah
Islamiah's "Ivy League" of schools where members send their children.
All major bomb attacks in Indonesia in recent years have been blamed on
Jemaah Islamiah, a shadowy network seen as the regional arm of al Qaeda. It
usually recruits young, poor Muslims from teeming Java island as its
foot-soldiers.
Bashir is serving a 30-month jail term for his role in the 2002 Bali bombings
that killed 202 people.
CLERICS SHOCKED
Kalla said he could not believe the images of the young suicide bombers on
the videos. He said this had erased any doubts among clerics that they had a
problem on their hands.
"I was shocked, not just me, but all of the clerics were too, (seeing) youths
laughing and then saying that they would die and go to heaven the next day,"
Kalla said.
"There were a lot of doubts before, but having watched the video then all the
clerics finally said this was the case."
Mainstream Muslim organizations would meet in Jakarta on December 2 to
kickstart a national effort to fight this war against militant ideas, Kalla
added.
There would also be a meeting of major Islamic boarding schools, known as
pesantrens in Indonesia, but it was unclear if that would be incorporated in the
December 2 event.
The move by clerics is the first time moderate groups have agreed to play a
decisive and united role in tackling terrorism.
In the past, they have been reluctant to criticize militants or have said
fighting terrorism was the responsibility of the government and the police.
The special team gathers top preachers from the two mainstream Islamic groups
in Indonesia, Nahdlatul Ulama and Muhammadiyah, that have a combined 70 million
members.
Anti-terrorism campaigns in Indonesia have often faced challenges because of
a widespread belief that the United States wants to attack Islam.
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