Posted on 03/09/2006 4:51:08 PM PST by Aussie Dasher
A FORMER Jemaah Islamiah (JI) leader used by Indonesia to "deprogram" terrorists in custody says he would be happy to come to Australia to help re-educate extremists.
The Federal Government is examining the use of deprogramming after a suggestion from Australian Federal Police commissioner Mick Keelty.
Mr Keelty studied anti-terrorism strategies in Indonesia, where Malaysian-born Nasir bin Abbas, a former JI operative, is used to help deprogram terrorists.
In his new role, Mr Abbas talks to arrested terror group members to open their minds to more moderate Islam, as well as extract information on terrorist operations.
Mr Abbas, the brother-in-law of convicted Bali bomber Mukhlas, today told ABC radio he wants to help terrorists in custody understand the true meaning of Islam.
"I give my advice to the police that I want to re-educate some of my friends, especially the new arrests - I want to tell them that they misunderstand about Islamic struggle and they also misunderstand about the meaning of jihad," Mr Abbas, the brother-in-law of convicted Bali bomber Mukhlas, said.
"If they need me to go to Australia to help them ... I will do that."
Mr Abbas said he has had "many" successes. Part of the job involves convincing people to turn in fellow terrorists.
"People can change if we talk to them and if we give them a reasonable argument or logical argument, I think people can change," he said.
"After I give them an explanation about understanding Islam and what is the true Islamic teaching, then they ... cooperate with the Indonesian police."
But Mr Abbas declined to comment on claims by civil liberties groups that the practice was similar to torture.
Only If he can keep his head on his shoulders.
Haven't they claimed good results in Yemeni jails only to find terrorists returning to their extremist views as soon as they're released?
Australia to "Brainwash" Jailed Extremists
SYDNEY, March 9, 2006 (IslamOnline.net & News Agencies) The Australian government announced on Thursday, March 9, it would consider a proposal by its top policeman to "de-program" Muslims jailed on terror charges despite criticism from rights activists branding the idea as a form of brainwashing.
"It is something that we will give thought to," Foreign Minister Alexander Downer told reporters, according to Agence France-Presse (AFP).
Police Commissioner Mick Keelty tabled the idea on Wednesday, March 8, in an interview with ABC Television's Lateline program.
He said the technique would involve using respected imams or previous militants to convert extremists to more moderate views.
"Essentially, it would be a threshold question in terms of policy as to whether we would engage in something that forces people into some sort of de-programming or de-radicalization," Keelty said.
"But it also opens up the opportunity to get information that would otherwise not be available."
Twenty-four Muslims are facing terrorism charges in Australian, which has never suffered a major peacetime attack on home soil.
Successful
Both Downer and Keelty maintain that similar programs are being successfully implemented in Indonesia, Pakistan, Sri Lanka, Singapore and Britain.
"Those governments have made an attempt to persuade extremists and terrorists who have been held in prison to change their point of view and to understand that it's not the Islamic way to kill, it's not the Islamic way to murder," the minister said.
"And in some cases that process has been successful," he told reporters.
Keelty said Indonesia's anti-terrorist squad now had former Jemaah Islamiah (JI) commander Nasir bin Abbas working for them and re-educating arrested JI recruits.
"It's somebody they would have otherwise looked up to as a natural leader, in terms of a terrorist, and they've turned him around and used him to convert the others," he added.
Indonesia had convicted around 200 people of terrorist-related offences since the 2002 Bali bombings, in which 88 Australians were among the 202 killed.
Keelty said Jakarta had to do something with those offenders before they could be released back into the community.
"Two hundred people incarcerated presents a problem if they haven't been reformed by the time they come back out into the community."
Brainstorming
The proposal, however, drew immediate rebuke from the Australian Council of Civil Liberties.
"It's not the sort of thing that should occur in a democratic nation. It is just the sort of thing that totalitarian regimes engage in," council's spokesman Cameron Murphy told Reuters.
"It is not the role of the government to impose its views on citizens," he said.
Fellow council activist Terry O'Gorman agreed.
"These countries the police commissioner mentions are involved in torture," O'Gorman told AFP.
"This de-programming is part of the same basket of procedures."
O'Gorman maintained there was no evidence to suggest that the practice, which he said was better described as "brainwashing", was effective in deterring terrorism.
Australian Muslim Civil Rights Advocacy Network spokesman Waleed Kadous also had reservations.
"It's important to highlight that already many respected scholars in the Muslim community are informally deconstructing terrorism and condemning terrorism to their congregations already," he told AFP.
"If it's voluntary we have no objection to it, but the problem once you make it compulsory is it just won't work, because religious leaders who do so will be seen as instruments of the government and will lose credibility to those people."
Australia, a close ally of the US with troops in Iraq and Afghanistan, has strengthened its anti-terror laws since the 9/11 attacks.
Most Australian Muslims blame Prime Minister John Howard for fostering an image of the minority as the enemy within through his hard-line policies.
Rights groups condemned as draconian Howard's new anti-terror law while pundits have blamed the law for creating an atmosphere of fear toward the Muslim minority.
Australia is home to some 300,000 Muslims out of a population of 20 million, most of whom live in the biggest city of Sydney.
Despite some 40 years of trying to rehabilitate and mainstream convicted felons -- and the bloody trail that has been left behind that attempt, the world still blindly disbelieves that some are just plain evil, that they don't want to reform, that they actually enjoy destroying others.
This is just a free pass to get out of jail and go back to their cowardly, evil ways.
De-portment is better than de-programming.
de-fenestration trumps both.
Disclaimer: Opinions posted on Free Republic are those of the individual posters and do not necessarily represent the opinion of Free Republic or its management. All materials posted herein are protected by copyright law and the exemption for fair use of copyrighted works.