Slide show at a pro-bin Laden rally in inner-city Jakarta last night.
Three days after the world learnt of Osama bin Laden’s death, tensions last night were running high at the office of the fundamentalist Islamic Defenders’ Front (Front Pembela Islam) in Central Jakarta.
More than a thousand observant Muslims gathered to vent their frustration at the United States, condemning President Barack Obama as a terrorist and declaring bin Laden a hero.
The gathering joined in frequent pantomime-like chants condemning Obama, the US and Israel that had all the hallmarks of a true-believers socialist rally in other parts of the world.
The group, consisting mostly of young and middle-aged men donning peci, the hat traditionally worn by Muslims in south-east Asia, spilled out of the study centre of the FPI, a religious and political organisation that has reached out to Indonesian Islamists dismayed at the softer form of the religion practised by their countryfolk.
But the rally also exposed a contradiction that has emerged in the seething anger of bin Laden’s fellow travellers. While on one hand condemning America’s treatment of bin Laden, they also challenged the evidence that he was dead.
One speaker presented a slide show that demonstrated — correctly — that the supposed photo of bin Laden that circulated rapidly after his death was the product of computer trickery. A flyer on the issue circulating at the rally falsely claimed the photo was circulated by the US government. It went on to sprout conspiracy theories of electoral imperatives and political propaganda to bolster its case.
This was a crowd upset not just at the death (deep in their bones, I suspect they believe this to be the truth) of bin Laden, but also at the celebratory response of Americans. One speaker drew a comparison between those celebrating and Amrozi, the “smiling assassin” executed over his involvement in the 2002 Bali bombing.
In an oddly endearing footnote to last night’s gathering, the key speakers invited journalists to the front of the room to ask questions. But stared down by several hundred pairs of eyes, their owners worked into an angry stupour, only correspondents from Bloomberg and Al Jazeera were game to speak up.
While the FPI centre was festooned with imagery celebrating bin Laden and condemning Obama, so far these images and their message appears limited to Indonesia’s fringes, physically and psychologically.
As a secular democracy with a majority Muslim population, Indonesia and its leaders need to undertake a careful balancing act, signalling its commitment to liberal values but avoiding antagonising the country’s powerful Muslim activist groups.
Applied to the death of bin Laden, the formula involved public statements condemning terrorism and renewing Indonesia’s commitment to fighting acts of extremism, but steering clear of any direct mention of bin Laden.
Indeed, in the days since bin Laden’s death many world leaders have taken the chance to publicly welcome his demise, but Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono instead offered up a spokesman to meekly declare: “It will be good for the nation, people and government of Indonesia to work together to free ourselves from terrorism.”
Bin Laden’s death also has another dimension for Indonesia. Abbottabad, the town of bin Laden’s last hurrah, was the site of the arrest earlier this year of suspected terrorist Umar Patek. Just yesterday, the Indonesian Defence Minister Purnomo Yusgiantoro revealed that Patek had been in Abbottabad to seek a meeting with bin Laden.
It’s little wonder that Indonesia watchers and government security figures have warned that the capture of bin Laden increases the chances of a terror attack on Indonesian soil. If such an attack does eventuate, rallies of incitement such as that last night in inner-city Jakarta will doubtless be a major factor.
Its only a matter of time and opportunity
I wonder what it was like at the Defenders’ Front of Islam meeting, and the Islamic Protectors Front.
Splitters!
One can’t help but think that the U.S.A. might have been better off leaving Bin Laden to fade away into irrelevance and obscurity.
Speculation about the truth of his reported demise aside, that is.
Whether Bin Laden was genuinely killed in Abbottabad or not (and frankly, if he was, then the U.S.A. are doing a spectacularly crap job of convincing the world of it) the important thing for the U.S.A. is the perception that he was killed there.
I am leaning more and more towards the view that the U.S.A. have endangered thousands of Western Civilians around the globe by reinvigorating Al Q’ aida’s popular support, all so the U.S.A. can indulge in some posturing and breast – beating about how they always get their man.
Justification of the thousands of U.S. Military lives lost, Trillions of dollars wasted and Millions of Afghani and Iraqi civilian dead, appears to be the primary motivation behind this story about Bin Laden’s assassination (true or otherwise).
To claim it will act as a deterrent to prospective terrorists is incredibly naive – we are talking about organisations that produce suicide bombers in their dozens – potential martyrdom will actually be an attractant.
The simultaneous denial of bin Laden’s death and blaming the US for killing him reminds me of the immediate post 9/11 reaction (in Pakistan and elsewhere) of denying that bin Laden or any other Muslim played any role in the attacks and jusifying their reasons for doing so. Double-think…
Who cares who thinks Bin Laden was a hero? Why would you give these people air time at all?