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Indonesian prosecutors attempt to link Muslim cleric to terror
network
By John Roberts
13 June 2003
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Late last month, prosecutors in the trial of Muslim fundamentalist
cleric Abu Bakar Bashir placed four men, all accused of the participating
in the terrorist attack in Bali on October 12, on the stand as
witnesses in the Jakarta trial.
As the four prosecution witnesses gave their evidence, the
governments aim in the very public transportation of the
four from Denpassar to the Jakarta courtroom became clear: to
associate Bashir with the Islamic terrorist network that the government
claims he headsthe Jemaah Islamiah (JI) which is accused
of being behind the Bali atrocity. In remarks made the weekend
before the Bali witnesses appeared, the senior police officer
involved in the Bali investigation, I. Made Mangku Pastika, said
he hoped the evidence of the four would implicate Bashir in the
Bali bombings.
Bashir, whose trial began on April 23, is charged with treason
over alleged plans to topple the government and assassinate the
then Vice President Megawati Sukarnoputri. He is also charged
with authorising attacks on 38 churches across Indonesia in 2000
that resulted in the death of 19 people and with immigration offenses
and making false statements to police. He has not been charged
with involvement in the Bali attack, which claimed 202 lives.
By any objective measure the calling of the Bali four served
to underline the weakness of the evidence publicly revealed so
far in the criminal case against Bashir and the essentially political
character of the trial that is taking place.
The four witnesses were Ali Imron, Ali Ghufron (also known
as Mukhlas), Hutomo Pamungkas (also known as Mubarok) and Iman
Sumudra. Imron and Mukhlas are brothers of Amrozi Nurhasyim, the
first of the Bali suspects to go on trial. Mukhlas claims to be
the operations officer in South East Asia of JI. Sumudra is accused
of being in direct charge of the Bali operation on behalf of JI.
The evidence of the four was confused and contradictory. Both
Imron and Mubarok suggested that Bashir was the leader of JI.
But when pressed, Imron told the court that he had only heard
from others that Bashir took over the running of JI after the
death, in 1999, of its alleged founder, Abdullah Sunkar. As
far as I know his (Sunkars) replacement was Abu Bakar Bashir,
he said. But at another point in his evidence Imron said he was
unsure who led JI.
When the judges asked Bashir to reply to Imrons evidence
he replied that he had met Imron two or three times but
this feeling that I am the head of Jemaah is not true.
Ghufron claimed to have met Bashir while he was exiled in Malaysia.
Ghufron also claimed to be well acquainted with Osama bin Laden,
leader of the Al Qaeda network, but denied that Al Qaeda was involved
in financing the Bali bombing. Ghufron did not support the claim
that Bashir headed JI.
In reply, Bashir denied having ever met Ghufron or that he
had ever met, as Ghufron claimed he had, Faiz Abu Bakar Bafana,
who is detained in Singapore and is claimed by authorities to
have key evidence against Bashir.
Sumudra testified bluntly that Bashir had no part in the Bali
attack or any other bombings. All four witnesses denied that Bashir
was connected to the Bali attack.
Media reports of the proceedings made reference to the muddled
testimony of the four and their playing up to the press and camera
crews. One report in Singapores Straits Times on
May 30, a report hostile to both Bashir and the Bali witnesses,
questioned the evidence in general being extracted from the Bali
suspects, suggesting that some suspects impart impossible-to-prove
links to terror chieftains such as Al Qaedas Osama bin Laden,
in assertions that may have more to do with bogus bravado than
concrete ties.
Since all four men had been under interrogation for months,
the police and prosecutors must have known that no hard evidence
against Bashir was going to emerge from their evidence. However
the authorities may well consider that the affair was a success
in laying the basis for guilt by associationalleged Bali
bombers with Bashir, both with JI. The bin Laden connection was
included for good measurean association that would serve
a political purpose, if not a juridical one.
Political prosecution
The prosecution of Bashir has been a political event from the
start, with two main areas of concerninternational and domesticfor
the government of Megawati Sukarnoputri.
Intense foreign pressure to arrest Bashir developed in 2002,
well before the incident in Bali. After Indonesian authorities
handed over alleged Al Qaeda operative, Omar al-Faruq, to the
CIA in June 2002, he was said to have broken down after three
months interrogation in Afghanistan. According to the Americans,
Faruq implicated Bashir as leader of JI, as having connections
with Al Qaeda and in various terrorist plots.
Washington joined with Malaysia and Singapore in demanding
Bashirs arrest. Both Asian states claimed that some of the
dozens of men arrested in late 2001 and early 2002 for alleged
terrorist activities, most under notorious Internal Security Acts,
had pointed to Bashir as their emir.
The evidence of these prisoners is claimed to be critical to
the prosecutions case against Bashir but none of them have
been brought before a court or seen in public since their arrests.
Before the Bali attack, Indonesian police interviewed the detainees
but apart from some detainees sympathy for Bashirs
Islamic fundamentalist preaching and his call for an Islamic state
in the region, they could find no evidence linking Bashir to any
specific terrorist plot.
After the Bali bombing, the pressure on the Megawati regime
for Bashirs arrest increased. Before the first forensic
investigator had arrived at the scene of the crime, the Australian
government joined the chorus implicating JI and Bashir.
Megawati was pressured to issue an anti-terrorist decree that
returned powers to the police, including detention without trial
for six months, lost with the fall of Suharto dictatorship. On
October 20, one day after the decree was issued, Bashir was detained,
and the current charges were laid on April 14.
The Bashir case is seen both in Washington and Jakarta as a
test case. The Bush administration has been anxious to re-establish
ties with the Indonesian armed forces (TNI) and security apparatus
with which the US enjoyed close links during the three decades
of the Suharto dictatorship.
The Bashir prosecution will measure the ability and willingness
of the Indonesian security forces and the Megawati regime to suppress
the development of an Islamic fundamentalist movement. Washington
sees such a development as a threat to its interests in the economically
and politically unstable archipelago, which constitutes the worlds
largest Muslim state, and in the broader region. The regimes
economic and political dependence on the US makes it vital for
it to be seen as a determined participant in the war on
terror, despite the domestic problems that its compliance
creates.
The local ruling elites also regard Bashir as a threat. The
economic position of the great mass of the population has only
worsened since the fall of the dictatorship in 1998. Jakartas
economic and political tops have no answers for the problems of
society. The danger for them is that the Islamic fundamentalists
will be able to exploit the situation and undermine the influence
of the establishment parties, including the conservative Muslim-based
parties. For them, Bashirs crime is not his possible involvement
in acts of terror but that his reactionary program of an Islamic
state may become a rallying point for opposition to the ruling
elite.
It is these political considerations that make the question
of evidence in the criminal proceedings against Bashir a secondary
question. On the basis of the evidence made public so far, it
is not possible to determine whether Bashir has been involved
in planning terrorist attacks. What is certain is the highly political
character of the judicial proceedings in Jakarta.
See Also:
Trial of Islamic cleric accused
of terrorism begins in Jakarta
[24 April 2003]
Unanswered questions
in Bali bombing investigations
[11 November 2002]
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