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WSWS : News
& Analysis : Asia
: Indonesia
The political origins and outlook of Jemaah Islamiyah
Part 1
By Peter Symonds
12 November 2003
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If asked the question: What is Jemaah Islamiyah?
just 18 months ago, most people would have been unable to reply.
But since the Bali bombings in October 2002, JI has
become a virtual household word, synonymous with Islamic extremism
and terrorist violence throughout South East Asia. Despite its
notoriety, however, almost nothing of any genuine substance has
been written on the organisation.
During the past year, Australian Prime Minister John Howard
has seized on JIs alleged activities as further justification
of his support for the Bush administrations war on
terrorism and the US-led occupation of Iraq. JI has also
become the pretext for the renewal of Australias neo-colonial
ambitions within the South Pacific region and for the Howard governments
assault on democratic rights and civil liberties at home.
The Australian media, particularly Murdochs publications,
have deliberately worked to create a climate of fear, suspicion
and uncertainty in the aftermath of the Bali attack. Coverage
of the investigation and trials has been uniformly sensationalist
and at times openly racist. Warnings of new terrorist
plots and threats are constantly made, drawn largely from uncorroborated
and unnamed police and intelligence sources.
In Indonesia a different, though no less distorted, view of
JI prevails. There is widespread and entirely legitimate opposition
to the US-led wars on Afghanistan and Iraq. Moreover, many people
are deeply concerned that, in the name of fighting JI, the military
is reasserting its authority while fundamental democratic rights
are being underminedwith the open backing of Washington
and Canberra.
As a result, ordinary Indonesians are deeply suspicious of
US and Australian motives, highly critical of the claims being
made about JI and willing to believe conspiracy theories about
the Bali bombings and other terrorist atrocities. Such sentiments
are compounded by the nebulous character of JI, an organisation
that issues no statements, publishes no documents and has never
formulated a political program.
Even the name Jemaah Islamiyah, meaning Islamic
Community, evokes controversy. An attack on JI can be taken
as an attack on the majority of the Indonesian population. Blaming
JI for Bali would be, for many, like accusing the Christian
Community in the US of the Oklahoma bombing or the Hindu
Community in India for the destruction of the Ayodhya mosque.
This is why, according to International Crisis Group (ICG) analyst
Sidney Jones Less than half of the Indonesian population
is willing to be believe that JI even exists.
Jemaah Islamiyah, however, certainly does exist. There is ample
evidence from a variety of sources that JI was formally established
in the early 1990s by Abdullah Sungkar and Abu Bakar Bashir during
their exile in Malaysia. It is closely connected to a small number
of Islamic extremist schools in Indonesia, most notably, Bashirs
school at the village of Ngruki near Solo in Central Java. Thus
JI is sometimes referred to as the Ngruki network.
Notwithstanding their politically motivated and legally flawed
character, the Bali court cases have revealed that JI was definitely
involved. The four men who have so far been convicted have had
lengthy associations with the organisation. One turned states
evidence, admitted his involvement and expressed remorse. The
other three, while retracting their original statements, nevertheless
acknowledged playing some part in the bombings and openly applauded
the horrific results.
Most of the allegations about JIs terrorist activities
have never been tested in court. Their source is some 200 JI
suspects being detained in Malaysia, Indonesia, Singapore,
the Philippines, Afghanistan and elsewhere. Many of these men
have been held for monthsand even yearswithout trial,
in flagrant breach of their basic democratic and legal rights.
In some cases, the information has been extracted through psychological
and physical torture. As a consequence, a lot of it is so tainted
it would be thrown out as inadmissible in most courts.
The medias incessant focus on JIs terrorist methods
serves to confuse the essential questions. Historically, a wide
and disparate array of organisations and groups, with wildly differing
objectives, have resorted to terrorism. Like them, Jemaah Islamiyah
has a definite political perspective. Only by examining its origins,
history and outlook can one understand why it has emerged, what
interests it serves and to whom it makes its appeal.
A deeply reactionary political tendency
The undeniable ideological leaders of JI have been Bashir and,
before his death in 1999, Sungkar. While publishing no formal
political documents, the two men spent decades elaborating a reactionary
fundamentalist outlook that justified violent attacks on enemies
of Islam.
Immediately striking are the ideological parallels between
JI and its declared mortal enemythe current US administration.
Making the obvious terminological allowances, the ignorant and
backward view of the world used by Bashir and Sungkar to justify
their defence of Islam through acts of terror is remarkably
similar to the outlook of Bush and his fellow gangsters in the
White House.
In the name of defending civilisation against an
axis of evil, Bush has enunciated a doctrine of preemptive
strikes and launched illegal military invasions of Afghanistan
and Iraq, causing the deaths of tens of thousands of innocent
civilians. Likewise Bashir and Sungkar proclaim an irreconcilable
conflict between good and evilbetween
the followers of Allah and the followers of
Satanto justify jihad (literally, struggle)
in defence of the worlds Muslims.
Like religious fanatics everywhere, JI ascribes every social
problem to immorality. Unemployment, poverty, inflation, high
taxes, poor crops and generalised social chaos are all put down
to loose sexual morals, the consumption of alcohol, hedonism,
inappropriate dress and the failure to work hard and pray five
times a day in the direction of Mecca. Such a list, mutatis
mutandis, would not be out of place in a gathering of rightwing
Christian fundamentalists in the USthe social base of the
Bush administration. Likewise, JIs solution to these social
illsthe imposition of sharia (Islamic) law with its barbaric
punishmentshas much in common with the demands of the US
rightwing for law-and-order, family values and state
executions.
New Zealand academic Tim Behrend summed up Bashirs teachings:
With the exception of his ideas of Islamic moral and civilisational
superiority and racially tainted theories of international politics,
the preponderance of Bashirs teachings are eminently moral...
For Bashir, the current environment is far too permissive in general,
and fatally flawed by its establishment on kafir principles,
including popular democracy, a usurious banking system, social
equality of the sexes, and licensing of immoral (and culturally
unacceptable) behaviour for economic gain [Reading Past
the Myth: The Public Teachings of Abu Bakar Bashir, February
2003, p.7].
In 1999, following their return to Indonesia from exile, Bashir
and Sungkar issued a tract entitled The Latest Indonesian
Crisis: Causes and Solutions. Couched in crude anti-Semitic
and racist terms, and directed against Kaffir Dutch,
Mushrik Japanese, and Kaffir Chinese and Christians,
it blamed the last century of oppression in Indonesia on the lack
of an Islamic state. All the evils that flowed from the Asian
financial crisis were a form of Kufr [punishment] due to
our neglect of the blessings of Allah. No accommodation
with the existing state of affairs was possible. There were just
two alternatives for any Muslim: life in an Islamic state implementing
the sharia, or death striving to achieve it.
Such views are not merely quaint or eccentric, but deeply reactionary
in the strict scientific meaning of the word. JI is irreconcilably
hostile to the secular state and to basic democratic rights. Its
ideal is a throwback to a largely mythological past, in which
feudalistic social relationsbetween master and servant;
cleric and congregation, and husband and wifeare governed
by a fixed, preordained and unchallengeable social code, justified
by religion and backed by brutal retributive punishment.
In no sense does JI defend or represent the interests of the
working class and oppressed masses. Its program and perspective
articulate the economic and social aspirations of a backward layer
of the Indonesian capitalist class, which regards Islam as a useful
tool for gaining access to the privileges and profits it feels
it has been denied. At the same time, it promotes communalism
and religious bigotry in order to keep working people ignorant
and divided, thus preventing any challenge from below.
To be continued
See Also:
One year after the Bali bombing:
The Australian government and the "war on terrorism"
11 October 2003
What is bin Ladenism?
Al Qaeda leader's letter to Americans
29 November 2002
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