SE Asia faces rising threat from IS groups

epa05252414 Filipino Armed Forces Chief of Staff General Hernando Iriberri (C) is seen behind a glass window visiting an injured soldier, who was among the wounded from an encounter with Abu Sayyaf militants, inside a military hospital in Zamboanga City, southern Philippines 10 April 2016. A daylong firefight has killed 18 Philippine government soldiers and at least five militants from the Abu Sayyaf Islamist group, including one foreigner, with at least 20 wounded, on the southwestern island of Basilan, according to local reports. The clashes took place  in the town of  Tipo-Tipo, in Basilan island that involved about 100 Abu Sayyaf members. The foreigner who died in the violence was identified as Moroccan Mohammad Khattab, a supporter of senior Abu Sayyaf leader Isnilon Hapilon, according to Western Mindanao Command spokesman Major Filemon Tan.  EPA/LAURENZ CASTILLO

 

Jakarta / AFP

Southeast Asia faces a growing risk of extremist violence as IS group supporters increasingly work together, but law enforcement agencies are unprepared for the new threat, a report warned on Tuesday.
The main danger lies in the strife-torn southern Philippines, where a handful of extremist groups have sworn allegiance to IS, according to the report from think-tank the Institute for Policy Analysis of Conflict (IPAC).
The groups have links to other parts of the region, particularly Indonesia and Malaysia, and IS has endorsed a Philippines-based militant as “amir”, or leader, for Southeast Asia, the report said.
“ISIS has deepened cooperation among extremist groups in Southeast Asia,” said the report, using another name for IS, adding the trend had widened the “extremist recruitment pool” and opened new channels for international funding and communication. “More deadly violence in the Philippines involving alliances of pro-ISIS groups is a matter of when, not if. It may also increase the possibility of cross-border extremist operations.”
However it noted that “most law enforcement agencies retain a strongly national orientation, without in-house expertise on groups outside their own borders”. While IS is rapidly losing territory in Iraq and Syria, the effect may be to increase the risk of revenge attacks in Southeast Asia, said the report by Jakarta-based IPAC, headed by terrorism analyst Sidney Jones.
The warning came as the United States ambassador to Manila, Philip Goldberg, said Tuesday that America wants to remain involved in the campaign to quell militancy in the southern Philippines, after President Rodrigo Duterte threatened to kick out US forces.
Parts of Southeast Asia have long struggled with militancy and hundreds of radicals from the region have flocked to join IS.
Southeast Asians fighting for the extremists have formed their own unit in the Middle East, called Katibah Nusantara, and are believed to be in regular contact with militants back home.
The region suffered its first IS attack in January when extremists launched a deadly suicide bombing and gun assault in Jakarta.
The IPAC report examined four pro-IS groups in the southern Philippine region of Mindanao and their links to neighbouring countries.
It said the Maute group, which is accused of carrying out a bombing in Duterte’s southern home town of Davao in September that killed 15 people, had the “smartest, best-educated and most sophisticated members”.

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