From Counter Extremism Project <[email protected]>
Subject Indonesia Considering Early Release Of Bombmaker In 2002 Bali Attacks
Date August 31, 2022 2:31 PM
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Indonesia’s government announced last week that Umar Patek—a former leading
member of the Southeast Asia jihadist group Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) and the





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Indonesia Considering Early Release Of Bombmaker In 2002 Bali Attacks



(New York, N.Y.) — Indonesia’s government announced
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last week that Umar Patek—a former leading member of the Southeast Asia
jihadist group Jemaah Islamiyah (JI) and the bombmaker in the 2002 Bali
attacks—may be granted an early release from prison. Patek, who has already
served half of his 20-year prison sentence, built the bombs used in the attacks
that killed 202 people. Nearly half of the victims were Australian nationals.



Indonesian authorities claim Patek has successfully been reformed and that his
case can be used as an example of the potential of deradicalization programs.
However, Patek remains a U.S. Specially Designated Global Terrorist (SDGT), and
JI remains a potent threat.



Although JI has slowed its activities targeting Westerners in Indonesia,
attacks are increasing against religious and ethnic minorities—a reflection of
ISIS’s influence on the terrorist group. ISIS is known for targeting vulnerable
demographics in their violent campaigns, and JI’s co-founder and former leader
Abu Bakar Bashir <[link removed]> pledged
loyalty to the terror organization in July 2014. While some reports claim that
JI does not support ISIS and remains tied to al-Qaeda, regional authorities,
including Australian intelligence officials, are concerned that JI is loyal to
ISIS and could increase terrorist activities in the region.



To read the Counter Extremism Project (CEP)’s resource Jemaah Islamiyah,
please clickhere <[link removed]>.



“The Indonesian government initially achieved some success dismantling Jemaah
Islamiyah and deradicalizing its members and other terrorist prisoners.
However, the influence of ISIS coupled with the release of JI leaders from
prison has proved to be the undoing of much of the progress that was made” said
former coordinator of the U.N. Security Council’s ISIL (Da’esh), al-Qaida and
Taliban Sanctions Monitoring Team and CEP Senior DirectorDr. Hans-Jakob
Schindler <[link removed]>.
“JI has undoubtably been reinvigorated in Indonesia over the past few years,
and the country’s government should take this into consideration in their
decision to release a member that has successfully caused so much destruction
and discord.”



To read CEP’s resource Indonesia: Extremism and Terrorism, please click here
<[link removed]>.



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