Monday, September 08, 2003

The many faces of Hambali


ANDREAS HARSONO
The Star

Encep Nurjaman 1980
CIANJUR (Indonesia) -- Hambali might be Asia’s most dangerous terrorist but back home he is widely remembered as a quiet young man who excelled in his studies and showed interest in Islam and politics.

Hambali is not his real name but his nom-de-guerre.

According to official records, Hambali was born Encep Nurjaman on April 4, 1964 in Pamokolan, a small town here, about three hours' drive south of Jakarta.

“He was a smart person, his English was superior, his knowledge on religion was intensive and he paid a lot of attention to his friends,” said Ati Fahriati, who is now a kindergarten teacher, but back in the early 1980s, used to attend the al-I’anah High School with Hambali.

English is not widely spoken in Cianjur and other places in Indonesia but young Hambali conversed in English with his English teacher. Hambali also turned out to be a natural leader among his peers.

Al-I’anah is an Islamic school where students are required to attend not only regular classes but learn the Quran and Arabic.

The students conversed daily in Sundanese – the language of the major ethnic group in this part of western Java – which was also spoken by Hambali, himself a Sundanese.

Encep Nurjaman 1983
His school report showed that he was an above average student when graduating from al-I’anah in July 1983 with scores of eight in Islam, English, Physics and Chemistry, and nine in Arabic out of the maximum 10. He averaged 7.6 in Mathematics, Sports and Hand Crafting.

Hambali is currently known as a chief strategist of the Jemaah Islamiah (JI) terrorist network. He was formerly a leader of Mantiqi One – a JI brigade whose territories include Malaysia and Singapore.

He was arrested in Thailand on Aug 15 and is being held in a secret location by the US authorities.

According to the International Crisis Group, a think-tank based in Brussels, Hambali was the head of Mantiqi One until early last year, when he was replaced by Mukhlas, another JI leader now facing trial in Bali.

Hambali himself became the overall head of JI’s four mantiqi (regions), according to Hashim bin Abbas, one of the Singapore JI detainees.

Prior to joining al-I’anah, young Hambali attended the Manarul Huda Islamic boarding school for nine years and learned to read Arabic and recite the Quran.

“He finished reciting the Quran when he was in grade four, or maybe grade three,” said Hindun Maksum, Hambali’s aunt who is a teacher at Manarul Huda and taught Hambali to recite the Quran.

Manarul Huda was established in 1936 by Hindun’s grandfather and it was only natural that Hambali went to study there. Hambali enrolled in al-I’anah in 1980.

Hindun remembered Hambali as a quiet young man who was never involved in a brawl.

“He was friendly, not a troublemaker, and rather quiet, maybe because of his background from the village,” said Aip Saripudin, another classmate who used to share the same classes with Hambali between 1980 and 1983.

Wirahma Wiradinata, the chemistry teacher at al-I’anah, said: “Encep was exceptional in his religious conviction. But he did not show any deviation from his religious teaching. Islam is a peaceful religion. I wondered if Hambali is really Encep. But if it is true Hambali is Encep, I am disappointed with him.”

Fahriati recalled that Hambali had regularly received a news bulletin from abroad.

“I have never seen it myself but probably from Iran. He was an avid reader and knew politics better than his peers.

“Once he approached me and asked: 'Do you know the most corrupt person in Indonesia? He answered it himself, 'Pak Harto'.'”

Fahriati was surprised and replied: “Please don’t say that.”

Hambali insisted that his argument was correct. “It’s true. One day it will be proven. Pak Harto is the Pharaoh of Asia. The Pharaoh was indeed rich just like Suharto,” he had said.

“Pak Harto” is a reference to President Suharto, Indonesia ‘s authoritarian leader, who ruled from 1968 to 1998.

A few weeks after graduating from al-I’anah, the 19-year-old Hambali told his parents and relatives that he was going to work in Malaysia, just like many other Cianjur citizens.

He assured his parents that he would financially help his younger siblings.

Most friends never met Hambali after his 1983 departure. Hindun said Encep only returned to Cianjur in 1990 for one week and later in 1995 along with his young Malaysian wife, Noraliza Abdullah.

“He said that he was doing some businesses in Malaysia, selling batik and other goods,” Hindun said.

What Hindun did not say was that Hambali had told his siblings and probably other relatives that he was also involved in training and “jihad fighting” in Afghanistan since 1987 just like other senior JI members in the late 1980s and early 1990s.

In Malaysia, Hambali met two Indonesian radical religious leaders, Abdullah Sungkar and Abubakar Ba'asyir, the co-founders of JI, who fled Indonesia in 1985 and internationalised their activities from Malaysia.

Hambali took a new name in his Malaysian permanent residence permit: Riduan Isamuddin.

The three of them shared the same housing compound in Sungai Manggis, Banting, Selangor. Both religious leaders actively sent their students “to study” in Afghanistan and Pakistan to fight the Soviet occupation in Afghanistan.

Fahriati said in an interview that she had learned about Hambali’s Afghanistan experience from his siblings, who told her about their big brother’s sagas.

According to the International Crisis Group report “Jemaah Islamiah in South-East Asia: Damaged but Still Dangerous”, JI senior leaders were mostly trained in the camps of Saudi-financed Afghan mujahidin (Islamic fighter) leader Abdul Rasul Sayyaf. There they developed “jihadist fervour, international contacts and deadly skills.”

Hambali’s relatives and some teachers, however, still doubted if Hambali is their long lost Encep Nurjaman.

“Hambali is not Encep. His face is not similar. If only one knows Encep, the teenager, who never involved himself in trouble, one will realise that it is very unlikely he is Hambali,” said Hindun.

Monday, September 01, 2003

Starting From Kilometre Zero

The Star Newspaper, Kuala Lumpur

The Indonesian government’s declaration of martial law and military offensive against Acehnese separatists recently drew international attention to the troubled province on the western tip of Sumatra. ANDREAS HARSONO explains in a carefully researched and thoughtful essay why many Acehnese are fighting for independence from Jakarta.


IN 1926 an Indonesian journalist who lived in Batavia, then the colonial name of Jakarta, wrote a book about his cruise from Batavia to Amsterdam. Adi Negoro described in his two-series travelogue Melawat ke Barat (“Traveling to the West”) his stopovers in more than two dozens international cities such as Singapore, Medan, Colombo, Aden, Port Said, Marseille, Lisbon, Algiers, Gibraltar and Southampton. It was an eye-opening book of the early 20th century Dutch Indies –the colonial name of this vast archipelago. Adi Negoro mixed day-to-day stories with references to classical books, ranging from anthropology, to theology, from history to philosophy.

One of his interesting pauses was the seaport of Sabang on Weh Island in northern Sumatra where the Tambora had stopped to load up coal. Adi Negoro took a car ride around Sabang and compared the Sabang harbour with the more modern British-controlled Singapore where his ship had stopped earlier.

“If we compare only the ports, Sabang is obviously better than Singapore. But Sabang’s location is not that strategic. Although the Dutch government had made Sabang into a freeport, but it is not as busy as Singapore.” (Both seaports are located on the Straits of Malacca.)

He also wrote a little history. The Dutch built the Sabang harbour in 1887. Sabang Maatschappij, a private company commissioned by the Dutch government to manage the freeport, further developed the harbour between 1896 and 1911. It was equipped with a 2,600-ton ship repair dock. It also had four giant cranes that busily loaded up coal into ships entering Sabang from Europe, China, Japan, Singapore, Batavia and other places. In 1924 the company built another dock, 5,000 tons, to increase its repairing capacity.

“The livelihood of most people in Sabang depends on this seaport. There was a Kampoeng Tionghoa (Chinatown) near the harbour which was packed with stores and restaurants. Behind the harbour were the workers’ lodgings. On the seaside were offices of shipping companies such as Rotterdamsche Llyod Lloyd and Maatschappy Nederland,” Adi Negoro wrote.

What Adi Negoro he did not write was that Sabang was a part of Aceh –the stubborn territory that had fought against the Dutch colonialism between 1876 and 1904. The Dutch built Sabang not only to get for economic gain but also to help pacify the Acehnese.

Last June, I spent one hour in a speedboat to reach Sabang from Banda Aceh, the provincial capital of Aceh. with a speed boat. The Sabang harbour was picturesque with small fishing boats and tin-roofed warehouses. Outside the harbour was a small street and 300m meters away was the Chinatown named Jalan Perdagangan where Chinatown was located.

Outside the harbour, A pedicab driver, whose motorcycle was outfitted with a locally-made sidecar, approached me and offered a ride. More