Maldive Islands, a tourist paradise, feels lash of Islamic violence

Maldive Islands, a tourist paradise, feels lash of Islamic violence

Saturday, November 10, 2007

By RAVI NESSMAN

Associated Press Writer

MALE, Maldives (AP) While vacationing tycoons and bikini-clad Hollywood superstars blissfully sipped drinks on the Maldives’ secluded white beaches, an Islamic revolution fueled by preachers trained in Pakistan and the Middle East was brewing.

On Sept. 29, the two faces of the Maldives collided when a homemade bomb exploded in a park in the capital, Male, wounding 12 tourists, threatening the critical resort industry and sending the clear message that even this remote corner of paradise is not immune to terrorism.

The attack, and a bloody confrontation days later between police and masked Islamic extremists armed with harpoons, stunned this Indian Ocean nation and threatened its careful effort to balance its traditionally moderate Islamic heritage with liberal Western values.

The government reacted swiftly to crush the fundamentalist movement that had risen amid the palm trees and crystal blue waters of its 1,190 coral islands. Authorities banned the veil, arrested scores of suspected extremists, sealed underground mosques and promised a crackdown on radical preachers.

“We are not taking chances,” Information Minister Mohamed Nasheed said.

So far, the violence has not frightened off the tourists, who account for one-third of the economy, he said. But “if there is another attack, then we just close tourism here. And we can’t afford that,” he said.

By far the most prosperous country in south Asia, with a per capita annual income of $2,700, the republic had seemed safe from the worldwide rise of Islamic militancy. Its longtime ruler, President Maumoon Abdul Gayoom, had harnessed his nation’s major natural resource hundreds of small, deserted islands to create remote, upscale resorts that fueled explosive economic growth.

But the country also suffered deep divisions.

While many high school graduates went to Europe or Australia for a liberal education, others studied religion at extremist institutions in Pakistan and Saudi Arabia and spread their radical beliefs across the islands, said Rohan Gunaratna, a Singapore-based terrorism expert hired by the government. He estimated that several thousand of the country’s 300,000 people now follow these clerics.

“They are preaching a deviant form of Islam,” he said.

These once marginal preachers have found a new wave of adherents in recent years. The global outburst of Islamic anger after the U.S. invasion of Iraq and the spread of Internet access to this country’s remote islands played a major role in the growing fundamentalism, said Hassan Saeed, the Maldives’ former attorney general.

“Suddenly, an island nation cut off from the rest of the world became part of the global village,” he said.

So did the Maldives. But despite the relative prosperity, there weren’t enough jobs for the huge population of young people, and many turned to drugs or radical Islam, Saeed said. The Islamic Council, the government body that runs official mosques, accredits preachers and controls all aspects of religion here, was still distributing decades-old sermons to its imams and was caught unprepared, he said.

The trauma of the 2004 tsunami, which killed more than 100 people here and devastated many islands, also fueled an Islamic revival. Hussein Mohammed, 40, said he was among 200 displaced people originally from the island of Moondu who spent two years in an abandoned textile factory on the island of Gan before getting a new house. Many in the crowded factory sought solace in the translated copies of the Quran the government provided, and within months nearly all the women began wearing head scarves, he said.

“After something like the tsunami, this frightening thing, people became far more interested in religion,” he said.

While many of the fundamentalists were not violent, a Maldivian was caught trying to join the Taliban in Afghanistan, another was arrested in India seeking to buy sniper rifles, and a third was jailed by U.S. authorities in Guantanamo Bay, Saeed said.

“For a small country, there were a large number of alarming signals,” said Saeed, who quit the government in August, in part because he felt a report he wrote on the looming problem was ignored.

Like villagers on several other scattered islands, the people of Gan found themselves suddenly confronted by a small group of angry fundamentalists earlier this year.

“They said they are Muslims and others are not Muslims and that others should be killed,” said Daoud Ibrahim, the clean-shaven imam at the government mosque. “I have never seen this before … it’s against our traditions.”

While rows of villagers in knitted white skullcaps prayed in the spacious mosque with its green tile floors, the fundamentalists dressed in Saudi-style white robes and headdress took over a tiny mosque of concrete and corrugated metal meant for Bangladeshi construction workers. They pressured Maldivian women to wear head scarves, mocked clean-shaven men as unbelievers and quietly plotted to drive tourists out, officials said.

Some in the group were tsunami refugees from the remote island of Kalhadoo, which embraced a strict form of Islam more than a quarter century ago under the tutelage of a Saudi-educated preacher named Mohammed Ibrahim. Angry at Ibrahim’s dissident Islamic views, the government banished him from Male to Kalhadoo, where he quickly turned the islanders into his disciples, said Yousef Ismail, a former Kalhadoo resident who now lives in Gan. Ismail spoke as his wife sat nearby, covered head-to-toe in a black robe.

Police say at least one of the men on Gan, whose cell phone was discovered in the ocean near the airport, was directly connected to the Male blast. On Wednesday, police said the man, Abdul Latheef Ibrahim, had fled to Pakistan ahead of the blast along with nine other suspects from different Maldive islands. Six other suspects were already in custody.

The nail-packed bomb exploded just before 3 p.m. in a Male park popular with tourists. The blast wounded 12 vacationers from Japan, China and Britain. Though the bomb was poorly built, it was a sign of more attacks to come if the government did not confront the problem, terrorism expert Gunaratna said.

“This is the way it starts, then the bomb-making becomes more sophisticated because they learn,” he said.

After the bombing, the band of fundamentalists on Gan disappeared amid conflicting reports they had been arrested, fled abroad or were hiding in the island’s lush palm groves or even in their own homes.

The government swiftly launched a wave of arrests around Male and brought in the FBI. On Oct. 7, scores of police landed on the island of Himandhoo, a reputed insurgent stronghold.

The islanders were waiting. Photographs published in magazines showed masked men, some wearing motorcycle helmets and carrying clubs, gathered in an unauthorized mosque they had rebuilt after authorities demolished it last year.

A melee broke out. Islanders stabbed one officer in the leg with a harpoon, slashed another with a gigantic fishing hook and nearly severed the hand of a third, said spokesman Nasheed. When the fighting ended the next day, more than 30 troops and officers were injured and 65 islanders arrested.

In the wake of the violence, the government announced it would encourage moderate Islamic scholars, update the religious curriculum to make it relevant and enforce an earlier law prohibiting women from veiling their faces. But clusters of veiled women continue to walk the streets of Male, underscoring the challenge the government faces.

Nasheed said he also instructed state-owned media to stop glorifying holy war and cease referring to Palestinian suicide bombers as jihadis. State television will hire no new female anchors who wear head scarves and no longer shows veiled women, even in news reports, he said.

The government will stop accrediting imams from extremist schools many of them in the Middle East and will fire all the radical scholars serving on the Islamic Council, he said.

“We are trying to replace them with people who have come from Asian countries, except Pakistan of course,” Nasheed said.

Officials from the Islamic party Adalaath blame the rise of extremism on political repression that has kept Gayoom in power since 1978. The latest crackdown would only make things worse, said Asim Mohamed, the party’s political secretary.

“We feel the government is using that opportunity to oppress the opposition,” he said.

Nasheed said the fight against the extremists was too critical to the country’s survival for the government to ignore.

“We have always been a very liberal society,” he said. “We can’t afford to look back 1,400 years.”

(Copyright 2007 The Associated Press. All Rights Reserved.)

In the interest of timeliness, this story is fed directly from the Associated Press newswire and may contain occasional typographical errors.

 

 

 

<http://wbztv.com/worldwire/JihadinParadise/resources_news_html>

Violence Breaks Out Between Sunni Insurgent Groups

Violence Breaks Out Between Sunni Insurgent Groups

By Joshua Partlow

Washington Post Foreign Service

Saturday, November 10, 2007; 12:14 PM

BAGHDAD, Nov. 10 — A deadly gun battle broke out between rival Sunni insurgent factions near the northern city of Samarra, in fresh violence that revealed a profound division among these organizations and the complicated nature of the fighting in Iraq.

The violence began Friday night outside Samarra, north of Baghdad, between members of the Islamic Army and al-Qaeda in Iraq, two Sunni insurgent groups that have become enemies. Many members of the Islamic Army have rejected al-Qaeda in Iraq’s methods and aligned themselves more closely with American soldiers, according to Iraqi police and insurgents.

 

People gather to check the damage on a minibus hit by a roadside bomb in Baghdad, Iraq, Saturday, Nov. 10, 2007. A roadside bomb aimed at a passing police patrol missed its target, hitting a minibus early Saturday in eastern Baghdad, killing at least two people, police said. (AP Photo/Karim Kadim) (Karim Kadim – AP)

Islamic Army fighters killed 18 suspected members of al-Qaeda in Iraq and captured 14 others, according to a leader of the Islamic Army known as Abu Ibrahim.

“Yes, there were heavy clashes started last night, but we did not intervene because it was between the resistance factions. But we will try to open channels with the Islamic Army to fight al-Qaeda,” said Maj. Bakir al-Bazi of the Samarra police.

Abu Ibrahim said the fighting was in response to recent attacks by al-Qaeda in Iraq that killed four of their leaders, including one who was kidnapped from his house and killed in a public bazaar. He denied that anyone from his organization was killed, but an Iraqi police source told the Reuters news service that 15 Islamic Army fighters were killed.

Abu Ibrahim said the clashes erupted again Saturday afternoon, and two more al-Qaeda in Iraq leaders were killed.

A U.S. military spokesman in northern Iraq said he had no information about any fighting in the area.

Over the course of the year, several Sunni insurgent groups have taken up the fight against al-Qaeda in Iraq. Many of them have joined the ad-hoc forces organized by American soldiers to serve as local defense groups, providing intelligence information and other assistance to American soldiers about their common enemies. The Iraqi government has expressed concerns that some of these fighters have abused their new authority, and it fears emboldening new, unaccountable militias.

Members of these “volunteer” forces in Diyala province on Saturday, working with U.S. and Iraqi troops, helped arrest as many as five leaders of al-Qaeda in Iraq, said Hussain al-Zubaidi, an official with the Diyala Provincial Council. The U.S. military issued a statement saying 10 people were arrested Saturday during operations in central and northern Iraq to disrupt al-Qaeda in Iraq.

In a separate development, the U.S. military said a U.S. soldier was killed, and three others were wounded, when a bomb exploded near them in Diyala province Friday.

Special correspondent Mohanned Saif Aldin in Tikrit and other Washington Post staff in Iraq contributed to this report.

 

 <http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2007/11/10/AR2007111000382.html?topnews>

 

Israeli military wounds one militant, two civilians, in attacks on Gaza rocket squads

Israeli military wounds one militant, two civilians, in attacks on Gaza rocket squads

The Associated Press

Published: November 10, 2007

GAZA CITY, Gaza Strip: Israeli forces attacked a car carrying Islamic Jihad militants near the Jebaliya refugee camp in the northern Gaza Strip on Saturday, wounding one person, the faction said. An airstrike minutes later targeted a rocket launcher ready to fire, the military said, and two civilians were wounded, according to Palestinian health officials.

The first attack by ground forces targeted a rocket squad, the military said. Two rockets were fired from the site at southern Israel earlier in the day, it added.

One militant was wounded, and a second who was traveling in the car escaped before the vehicle was hit, Islamic Jihad said.

The military said the airstrike targeted a rocket launcher armed with a projectile. A prominent Gaza physician and a 21-year-old civilian were hurt in the attack, according to Dr. Moaiya Hassanain of Gaza’s Health Ministry

 

<http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/11/10/africa/ME-GEN-Gaza-Blast.php>

Egypt detains 11 Muslim Brotherhood members

Egypt detains 11 Muslim Brotherhood members

 

10 November 2007 | 20:14 | FOCUS News Agency

Cairo. Egyptian authorities have detained 11 members of the opposition Muslim Brotherhood, a security source said Saturday, as the regime pressed its crackdown on the banned opposition movement, AFP reports.

The Islamists were arrested late Friday during a raid on their homes in the town of Sakla, near Mansura in the Nile Delta.

The 11 are accused of “belonging to an illegal organisation”, the source said, adding that “security services found documents outlining the group’s ideology in the flat where the meeting took place.”

The Muslim Brotherhood, which describes itself as a moderate Islamic organisation that wants to bring Islamic law to Egypt, has been outlawed since 1954.

The group has more than a fifth of the seats in Egypt’s parliament, but its representatives sit as independents because of its illegal status.

 

 <http://www.focus-fen.net/?id=n126770>