Back
About RSIS
Introduction
Building the Foundations
Welcome Message
Board of Governors
Staff Profiles
Executive Deputy Chairman’s Office
Dean’s Office
Management
Distinguished Fellows
Faculty and Research
Associate Research Fellows, Senior Analysts and Research Analysts
Visiting Fellows
Adjunct Fellows
Administrative Staff
Honours and Awards for RSIS Staff and Students
RSIS Endowment Fund
Endowed Professorships
Career Opportunities
Getting to RSIS
Research
Research Centres
Centre for Multilateralism Studies (CMS)
Centre for Non-Traditional Security Studies (NTS Centre)
Centre of Excellence for National Security
Institute of Defence and Strategic Studies (IDSS)
International Centre for Political Violence and Terrorism Research (ICPVTR)
Research Programmes
National Security Studies Programme (NSSP)
Social Cohesion Research Programme (SCRP)
Studies in Inter-Religious Relations in Plural Societies (SRP) Programme
Other Research
Future Issues and Technology Cluster
Research@RSIS
Science and Technology Studies Programme (STSP) (2017-2020)
Graduate Education
Graduate Programmes Office
Exchange Partners and Programmes
How to Apply
Financial Assistance
Meet the Admissions Team: Information Sessions and other events
RSIS Alumni
Outreach
Global Networks
About Global Networks
RSIS Alumni
Executive Education
About Executive Education
SRP Executive Programme
Terrorism Analyst Training Course (TATC)
International Programmes
About International Programmes
Asia-Pacific Programme for Senior Military Officers (APPSMO)
Asia-Pacific Programme for Senior National Security Officers (APPSNO)
International Conference on Cohesive Societies (ICCS)
International Strategy Forum-Asia (ISF-Asia)
Publications
RSIS Publications
Annual Reviews
Books
Bulletins and Newsletters
RSIS Commentary Series
Counter Terrorist Trends and Analyses
Commemorative / Event Reports
Future Issues
IDSS Papers
Interreligious Relations
Monographs
NTS Insight
Policy Reports
Working Papers
External Publications
Authored Books
Journal Articles
Edited Books
Chapters in Edited Books
Policy Reports
Working Papers
Op-Eds
Glossary of Abbreviations
Policy-relevant Articles Given RSIS Award
RSIS Publications for the Year
External Publications for the Year
Media
Cohesive Societies
Sustainable Security
Other Resource Pages
News Releases
Speeches
Video/Audio Channel
External Podcasts
Events
Contact Us
S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies Think Tank and Graduate School Ponder The Improbable Since 1966
Nanyang Technological University Nanyang Technological University
  • About RSIS
      IntroductionBuilding the FoundationsWelcome MessageBoard of GovernorsHonours and Awards for RSIS Staff and StudentsRSIS Endowment FundEndowed ProfessorshipsCareer OpportunitiesGetting to RSIS
      Staff ProfilesExecutive Deputy Chairman’s OfficeDean’s OfficeManagementDistinguished FellowsFaculty and ResearchAssociate Research Fellows, Senior Analysts and Research AnalystsVisiting FellowsAdjunct FellowsAdministrative Staff
  • Research
      Research CentresCentre for Multilateralism Studies (CMS)Centre for Non-Traditional Security Studies (NTS Centre)Centre of Excellence for National SecurityInstitute of Defence and Strategic Studies (IDSS)International Centre for Political Violence and Terrorism Research (ICPVTR)
      Research ProgrammesNational Security Studies Programme (NSSP)Social Cohesion Research Programme (SCRP)Studies in Inter-Religious Relations in Plural Societies (SRP) Programme
      Other ResearchFuture Issues and Technology ClusterResearch@RSISScience and Technology Studies Programme (STSP) (2017-2020)
  • Graduate Education
      Graduate Programmes OfficeExchange Partners and ProgrammesHow to ApplyFinancial AssistanceMeet the Admissions Team: Information Sessions and other eventsRSIS Alumni
  • Outreach
      Global NetworksAbout Global NetworksRSIS Alumni
      Executive EducationAbout Executive EducationSRP Executive ProgrammeTerrorism Analyst Training Course (TATC)
      International ProgrammesAbout International ProgrammesAsia-Pacific Programme for Senior Military Officers (APPSMO)Asia-Pacific Programme for Senior National Security Officers (APPSNO)International Conference on Cohesive Societies (ICCS)International Strategy Forum-Asia (ISF-Asia)
  • Publications
      RSIS PublicationsAnnual ReviewsBooksBulletins and NewslettersRSIS Commentary SeriesCounter Terrorist Trends and AnalysesCommemorative / Event ReportsFuture IssuesIDSS PapersInterreligious RelationsMonographsNTS InsightPolicy ReportsWorking Papers
      External PublicationsAuthored BooksJournal ArticlesEdited BooksChapters in Edited BooksPolicy ReportsWorking PapersOp-Eds
      Glossary of AbbreviationsPolicy-relevant Articles Given RSIS AwardRSIS Publications for the YearExternal Publications for the Year
  • Media
      Cohesive SocietiesSustainable SecurityOther Resource PagesNews ReleasesSpeechesVideo/Audio ChannelExternal Podcasts
  • Events
  • Contact Us
    • Connect with Us

      rsis.ntu
      rsis_ntu
      rsisntu
      rsisvideocast
      school/rsis-ntu
      rsis.sg
      rsissg
      RSIS
      RSS
      Subscribe to RSIS Publications
      Subscribe to RSIS Events

      Getting to RSIS

      Nanyang Technological University
      Block S4, Level B3,
      50 Nanyang Avenue,
      Singapore 639798

      Click here for direction to RSIS

      Get in Touch

    Connect
    Search
    • RSIS
    • Publication
    • RSIS Publications
    • IP21025 | The Infiltration of Jemaah Islamiyah into Indonesian State and Society
    • Annual Reviews
    • Books
    • Bulletins and Newsletters
    • RSIS Commentary Series
    • Counter Terrorist Trends and Analyses
    • Commemorative / Event Reports
    • Future Issues
    • IDSS Papers
    • Interreligious Relations
    • Monographs
    • NTS Insight
    • Policy Reports
    • Working Papers

    IP21025 | The Infiltration of Jemaah Islamiyah into Indonesian State and Society
    Leonard C. Sebastian, Syed Huzaifah Bin Othman Alkaff

    23 December 2021

    download pdf

    SYNOPSIS

    Jemaah Islamiyah’s ability to infiltrate the building blocks of Indonesian society and its mainstream religious institutions is innovative. It is an indication that JI is intent on ensuring its survival by strengthening its roots within mainstream religious organisations and adopting an agenda of embedding itself within Indonesia’s local context.

    COMMENTARY

    On 17 November 2021, Densus 88 (Indonesia’s anti-terror detachment in the National Police) announced the arrest of three individuals. They were all holding significant roles in national and social entities and organisations, and are believed to have supported terrorist activities in East Java. They were alleged to have raised funds for Jemaah Islamiyah (JI). On 26 November 2021, a more extensive operation was conducted, netting a further 24 individuals suspected of fundraising for JI to the tune of more than US$2 million annually.

     

    IP21025 Bandung Fikri Rasyid Unsplash
    Bandung in West Java was intended for the bombing of Shi’ites, who are increasingly under threat by organisations like JI which preach anti-Shi’ism. Photo by Fikri Rasyid on Unsplash.

     

    The Key Persons Arrested

    Farid Ahmad Okbah is chairman and co-founder of Partai Dakwah Rakyat Indonesia (PDRI). He has been a member of the Council of Young Intellectuals and Indonesian Ulema (MIUMI). Farid is also the director of Yayasan Al Islam, Bekasi. Among the first batch of students graduating in the 1980s from the Islamic and Arabic College of Indonesia (LIPIA), which is known to be backed by Saudi Arabia, Farid is regarded as “pakar Syiah” or an “expert” — or critic — on Shi’ism.

    Since 2012, Farid had been calling for the banning of the Shi’ite movement in Indonesia. Influenced by the 2011 conflict in Syria, when Shi’ites were seen to be persecuting the Sunnis, his views mirror similar anti-Shi’ite rhetoric of various global jihadist groups, and propagated their application to the Indonesian context.

    Anung Al-Hamat is a leading member of PDRI and doubles as one of JI’s top administrators in his capacity as founder and member of the supervisory board for Perisai Nusantara Esa (Shield of Nusantara Esa), which operates as a legal aid organisation for arrested JI members. His biography indicates that he graduated with a doctoral degree in Islamic Education from Universitas Ibn Khaldun Bogor, West Java. His undergraduate training was in Hadith at the Al-Azhar University in Cairo.

    Anung published The Book of Tarbiyah Jihadiyah Imam Bukhari, based on his academic article that examines the above-mentioned concept in Islamic education, and its significance in Indonesia’s independence struggle. In the book, Anung argues that jihad education should be made mandatory for all educators, teachers and states.

    Ahmad Zain An-Najah, is a member of the fatwa commission of the Majelis Ulama Indonesia (MUI, or Indonesia Ulema Council), and an alumnus of the Pesantren Al-Mukmin, Ngruki established by JI founders Abdullah Sungkar and Abu Bakar Ba’asyir. Ahmad also held key positions in several pesantren and institutions in Indonesia. He claims to have graduated with a doctorate summa cum laude and master’s degree from Cairo’s Al-Azhar University, plus an undergraduate degree from the Islamic University of Madinah in Saudi Arabia.

    Ahmad supports the idea — which parallels the policies of Chechen separatists, Al-Qaeda in Iraq, and Boko Haram in Nigeria — that Indonesian Muslim women could partake in jihad in Muslim countries but primarily in a supporting capacity. He has also argued that once jihad has become obligatory, women able to take up arms must participate in armed jihad and do not require permission from their husband or guardian.

    Through his statements and writings, Ahmad had earlier argued for the delegitimisation of the position of the Indonesian legislative bodies, the People’s Consultative Assembly and the People’s Representative Council, on the grounds that they had many practices, religious edicts/opinions and stances that supported non-Muslim systems of governance. He rejected the non-Muslim membership in the Indonesian Parliament on grounds that such participation was not in accordance with the “Islamic” standard of leadership and governance. Nevertheless, Ahmad himself was amply qualified for his position in MUI and his arrest is the most disconcerting of the three.

    How Are the Three Connected?

    Reports indicate that the three individuals connected with JI through the Baitul Maal Abdurrahman Bin Auf (BM ABA). BM ABA is an institution that manages alms, donations and disbursements under the Abdurrahman bin Auf Foundation. BM ABA has an alms collection wing, LAZ BM ABA, which is licensed by the National Amil Zakat Agency (Baznas) on the authority of the Ministry of Religious Affairs (Kemenag).

    Several charitable organisations in Indonesia are known to be part of the JI network and they often seek public sympathy and garner support through their humanitarian programmes and missions. BM ABA is one such organisation; it has a programme called Jihad Global, which aims to finance young individuals connected to JI to go abroad to receive training, thereby building the group’s military capability. Ahmad and Farid were on the BM ABA Sharia Council, while Farid and Anung were identified via a trail linked to a 2018 donation worth Rp 10 million (about S$1,000) from LAZ BM ABA to Perisai Nusantara Esa.

    How JI Got into the Mainstream

    JI’s traditional image — as a transnational terrorist movement linked with Al-Qaeda and associated with the increased “Arabisation” in the region, as well as the influence of Pan-Arabist movements, Salafism and Wahhabism — is now considered passé. For JI to gain acceptance in Indonesia, it had to embed itself within the Indonesian mainstream groups, and by repackaging the ideal of global jihad to the Indonesian context. It appears to have done precisely that, by infiltrating the MUI.

    Founded in Jakarta on 26 July 1975 during the New Order era, MUI is Indonesia’s top body for Islamic scholars. MUI issues fatwas to the Islamic community, dictating the general direction of Islamic life in Indonesia. With the collapse of Suharto’s regime in 1998, changes in civil society have widened the role of the MUI and made it more complex. MUI has evolved towards a more active role by functioning as the protector of Muslim interests and a critical partner of the Indonesian government. It has become a trusted conduit between Muslim communities and the national government.

    MUI’s place in the Indonesian Islamic firmament is so pivotal that in the 2019 presidential election, President Joko Widodo selected the then-sitting MUI leader Ma’ruf Amin to become his running mate to shore up his Islamic credentials. Today, Ma’ruf is the vice-president of Indonesia.

    JI now functions within the country’s legal and social frameworks. JI may not promote or represent itself as an anti-government movement or as being against the non-Muslims; nonetheless, the evidence manifest in its propaganda and activities suggests otherwise. The Densus 88 arrests attest that JI has infiltrated the building blocks of Indonesian society and its mainstream religious institutions.

    What Are the Implications?

    Local narratives of jihad have an appeal to Indonesians. They relate more readily to such accounts which are different from typical transnational narratives often regarded as detached from their own traditional settings. Religious opinions on armed jihad and the threat from the Shi’ites reinforce the perception of an Indonesian Islam that is under siege from external forces. These messages are subtle, and yet could evoke suspicion of political institutions and hatred towards non-Muslims. They sow negative attitudes and false ideas about the beliefs of fellow Indonesians from different faiths. Extremists could then exploit the opportunities to undermine the Pancasila state and the ethos of unity in diversity.

    The arrested individuals are not ordinary persons. They are persons of high calibre with recognised Islamic educational qualifications. Two of them are graduates from the Al-Azhar, an acclaimed university in Egypt with a very strong moderate (wasatiya) character. Segments of Indonesian Muslims have been directly influenced by the interpretations of Islam acquired from Egypt. There are political and religious leaders who studied in Egypt and they play crucial roles in Islamic mass organisations such as Muhammadiyah and Nahdlatul Ulama (NU). The recent arrests highlight how graduating from Al-Azhar alone is no guarantee of moderate Islamic views.

    The profiles of those arrested, their personal histories, their affiliations with JI and their views of jihad are well known. That they have been arrested so publicly indicates a determination on the part of the Indonesian authorities to not let them propagate radical religious views without consequence.

    JI now looks and acts differently as compared with the organisation it once was under Abu Bakar Ba’asyir. It has suffered from a dearth of strategic thinkers able to present a strategy befitting the new era. Old-school transnational jihadists, led by the previous generations, will find that their ideas face strong headwinds. The latest arrests, however, indicate that those in charge in Jakarta are taking no chances as they view JI’s changes in strategy and vision of Islam and political identity as a challenge and threat to Indonesian state and society.

    About the Authors

    Leonard C. SEBASTIAN is Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Indonesia Programme at the Institute of Defence and Strategic Studies (IDSS) at RSIS. Syed Huzaifah Bin Othman ALKAFF is Associate Research Fellow at the Indonesia Programme.

    Categories: IDSS Papers / Southeast Asia and ASEAN / Middle East and North Africa (MENA) / Global
    comments powered by Disqus

    SYNOPSIS

    Jemaah Islamiyah’s ability to infiltrate the building blocks of Indonesian society and its mainstream religious institutions is innovative. It is an indication that JI is intent on ensuring its survival by strengthening its roots within mainstream religious organisations and adopting an agenda of embedding itself within Indonesia’s local context.

    COMMENTARY

    On 17 November 2021, Densus 88 (Indonesia’s anti-terror detachment in the National Police) announced the arrest of three individuals. They were all holding significant roles in national and social entities and organisations, and are believed to have supported terrorist activities in East Java. They were alleged to have raised funds for Jemaah Islamiyah (JI). On 26 November 2021, a more extensive operation was conducted, netting a further 24 individuals suspected of fundraising for JI to the tune of more than US$2 million annually.

     

    IP21025 Bandung Fikri Rasyid Unsplash
    Bandung in West Java was intended for the bombing of Shi’ites, who are increasingly under threat by organisations like JI which preach anti-Shi’ism. Photo by Fikri Rasyid on Unsplash.

     

    The Key Persons Arrested

    Farid Ahmad Okbah is chairman and co-founder of Partai Dakwah Rakyat Indonesia (PDRI). He has been a member of the Council of Young Intellectuals and Indonesian Ulema (MIUMI). Farid is also the director of Yayasan Al Islam, Bekasi. Among the first batch of students graduating in the 1980s from the Islamic and Arabic College of Indonesia (LIPIA), which is known to be backed by Saudi Arabia, Farid is regarded as “pakar Syiah” or an “expert” — or critic — on Shi’ism.

    Since 2012, Farid had been calling for the banning of the Shi’ite movement in Indonesia. Influenced by the 2011 conflict in Syria, when Shi’ites were seen to be persecuting the Sunnis, his views mirror similar anti-Shi’ite rhetoric of various global jihadist groups, and propagated their application to the Indonesian context.

    Anung Al-Hamat is a leading member of PDRI and doubles as one of JI’s top administrators in his capacity as founder and member of the supervisory board for Perisai Nusantara Esa (Shield of Nusantara Esa), which operates as a legal aid organisation for arrested JI members. His biography indicates that he graduated with a doctoral degree in Islamic Education from Universitas Ibn Khaldun Bogor, West Java. His undergraduate training was in Hadith at the Al-Azhar University in Cairo.

    Anung published The Book of Tarbiyah Jihadiyah Imam Bukhari, based on his academic article that examines the above-mentioned concept in Islamic education, and its significance in Indonesia’s independence struggle. In the book, Anung argues that jihad education should be made mandatory for all educators, teachers and states.

    Ahmad Zain An-Najah, is a member of the fatwa commission of the Majelis Ulama Indonesia (MUI, or Indonesia Ulema Council), and an alumnus of the Pesantren Al-Mukmin, Ngruki established by JI founders Abdullah Sungkar and Abu Bakar Ba’asyir. Ahmad also held key positions in several pesantren and institutions in Indonesia. He claims to have graduated with a doctorate summa cum laude and master’s degree from Cairo’s Al-Azhar University, plus an undergraduate degree from the Islamic University of Madinah in Saudi Arabia.

    Ahmad supports the idea — which parallels the policies of Chechen separatists, Al-Qaeda in Iraq, and Boko Haram in Nigeria — that Indonesian Muslim women could partake in jihad in Muslim countries but primarily in a supporting capacity. He has also argued that once jihad has become obligatory, women able to take up arms must participate in armed jihad and do not require permission from their husband or guardian.

    Through his statements and writings, Ahmad had earlier argued for the delegitimisation of the position of the Indonesian legislative bodies, the People’s Consultative Assembly and the People’s Representative Council, on the grounds that they had many practices, religious edicts/opinions and stances that supported non-Muslim systems of governance. He rejected the non-Muslim membership in the Indonesian Parliament on grounds that such participation was not in accordance with the “Islamic” standard of leadership and governance. Nevertheless, Ahmad himself was amply qualified for his position in MUI and his arrest is the most disconcerting of the three.

    How Are the Three Connected?

    Reports indicate that the three individuals connected with JI through the Baitul Maal Abdurrahman Bin Auf (BM ABA). BM ABA is an institution that manages alms, donations and disbursements under the Abdurrahman bin Auf Foundation. BM ABA has an alms collection wing, LAZ BM ABA, which is licensed by the National Amil Zakat Agency (Baznas) on the authority of the Ministry of Religious Affairs (Kemenag).

    Several charitable organisations in Indonesia are known to be part of the JI network and they often seek public sympathy and garner support through their humanitarian programmes and missions. BM ABA is one such organisation; it has a programme called Jihad Global, which aims to finance young individuals connected to JI to go abroad to receive training, thereby building the group’s military capability. Ahmad and Farid were on the BM ABA Sharia Council, while Farid and Anung were identified via a trail linked to a 2018 donation worth Rp 10 million (about S$1,000) from LAZ BM ABA to Perisai Nusantara Esa.

    How JI Got into the Mainstream

    JI’s traditional image — as a transnational terrorist movement linked with Al-Qaeda and associated with the increased “Arabisation” in the region, as well as the influence of Pan-Arabist movements, Salafism and Wahhabism — is now considered passé. For JI to gain acceptance in Indonesia, it had to embed itself within the Indonesian mainstream groups, and by repackaging the ideal of global jihad to the Indonesian context. It appears to have done precisely that, by infiltrating the MUI.

    Founded in Jakarta on 26 July 1975 during the New Order era, MUI is Indonesia’s top body for Islamic scholars. MUI issues fatwas to the Islamic community, dictating the general direction of Islamic life in Indonesia. With the collapse of Suharto’s regime in 1998, changes in civil society have widened the role of the MUI and made it more complex. MUI has evolved towards a more active role by functioning as the protector of Muslim interests and a critical partner of the Indonesian government. It has become a trusted conduit between Muslim communities and the national government.

    MUI’s place in the Indonesian Islamic firmament is so pivotal that in the 2019 presidential election, President Joko Widodo selected the then-sitting MUI leader Ma’ruf Amin to become his running mate to shore up his Islamic credentials. Today, Ma’ruf is the vice-president of Indonesia.

    JI now functions within the country’s legal and social frameworks. JI may not promote or represent itself as an anti-government movement or as being against the non-Muslims; nonetheless, the evidence manifest in its propaganda and activities suggests otherwise. The Densus 88 arrests attest that JI has infiltrated the building blocks of Indonesian society and its mainstream religious institutions.

    What Are the Implications?

    Local narratives of jihad have an appeal to Indonesians. They relate more readily to such accounts which are different from typical transnational narratives often regarded as detached from their own traditional settings. Religious opinions on armed jihad and the threat from the Shi’ites reinforce the perception of an Indonesian Islam that is under siege from external forces. These messages are subtle, and yet could evoke suspicion of political institutions and hatred towards non-Muslims. They sow negative attitudes and false ideas about the beliefs of fellow Indonesians from different faiths. Extremists could then exploit the opportunities to undermine the Pancasila state and the ethos of unity in diversity.

    The arrested individuals are not ordinary persons. They are persons of high calibre with recognised Islamic educational qualifications. Two of them are graduates from the Al-Azhar, an acclaimed university in Egypt with a very strong moderate (wasatiya) character. Segments of Indonesian Muslims have been directly influenced by the interpretations of Islam acquired from Egypt. There are political and religious leaders who studied in Egypt and they play crucial roles in Islamic mass organisations such as Muhammadiyah and Nahdlatul Ulama (NU). The recent arrests highlight how graduating from Al-Azhar alone is no guarantee of moderate Islamic views.

    The profiles of those arrested, their personal histories, their affiliations with JI and their views of jihad are well known. That they have been arrested so publicly indicates a determination on the part of the Indonesian authorities to not let them propagate radical religious views without consequence.

    JI now looks and acts differently as compared with the organisation it once was under Abu Bakar Ba’asyir. It has suffered from a dearth of strategic thinkers able to present a strategy befitting the new era. Old-school transnational jihadists, led by the previous generations, will find that their ideas face strong headwinds. The latest arrests, however, indicate that those in charge in Jakarta are taking no chances as they view JI’s changes in strategy and vision of Islam and political identity as a challenge and threat to Indonesian state and society.

    About the Authors

    Leonard C. SEBASTIAN is Associate Professor and Coordinator of the Indonesia Programme at the Institute of Defence and Strategic Studies (IDSS) at RSIS. Syed Huzaifah Bin Othman ALKAFF is Associate Research Fellow at the Indonesia Programme.

    Categories: IDSS Papers

    Popular Links

    About RSISResearch ProgrammesGraduate EducationPublicationsEventsAdmissionsCareersVideo/Audio ChannelRSIS Intranet

    Connect with Us

    rsis.ntu
    rsis_ntu
    rsisntu
    rsisvideocast
    school/rsis-ntu
    rsis.sg
    rsissg
    RSIS
    RSS
    Subscribe to RSIS Publications
    Subscribe to RSIS Events

    Getting to RSIS

    Nanyang Technological University
    Block S4, Level B3,
    50 Nanyang Avenue,
    Singapore 639798

    Click here for direction to RSIS

    Get in Touch

      Copyright © S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies. All rights reserved.
      Privacy Statement / Terms of Use
      Help us improve

        Rate your experience with this website
        123456
        Not satisfiedVery satisfied
        What did you like?
        0/255 characters
        What can be improved?
        0/255 characters
        Your email
        Please enter a valid email.
        Thank you for your feedback.
        This site uses cookies to offer you a better browsing experience. By continuing, you are agreeing to the use of cookies on your device as described in our privacy policy. Learn more
        OK
        Latest Book
        more info