Everything about Hambali totally explained
Riduan Isamuddin also
transliterated as
Riduan Isamudin,
Riduan Isomuddin, and
Riduan Isomudin, better known by the
nom de guerre Hambali, born as
Encep Nurjaman, born
April 4,
1966 (
Indonesia) is the former military leader of the
Indonesian terrorist organization
Jemaah Islamiyah (JI), which is linked with
Al Qaeda. He is now in
extrajudicial detention in the
United States's
Guantanamo Bay detainment camps, in
Cuba.
Hambali was often described as "the
Osama bin Laden of
Southeast Asia". Some media reports describe him as Bin Laden's lieutenant for
Southeast Asian operations. Other reports describe him as an independent peer. He was highly trusted by Al Qaeda and was the main link between the two organisations. Hambali was a close friend of
Khalid Shaikh Mohammed, who planned
Operation Bojinka and the
September 11 Terrorist Attacks. Hambali envisioned creating a
Muslim state, in the form of an
Islamic superpower (a
theocracy) across Southeast
Asia, with himself as its leader (
Caliph). His ambition was to rule
Indonesia,
Malaysia,
Singapore,
Brunei,
Cambodia, and parts of the
Philippines,
Myanmar, and
Thailand
Receiving increasing attention in the aftermath of the 2002
Bali nightclub bombing, in which 202 people died, he was eventually apprehended in a joint operation by the
CIA and
Thai police. He is currently imprisoned in Guantanamo Bay detention centre in Cuba, after three years of CIA custody in a secret location.
Early life
Riduan Isamuddin was born Encep Nurjaman in the
rice belt of Pamokolan, a small town in
Cianjur, in the province of
West Java,
Indonesia. He was the son of a peasant farmer, and was the second of thirteen children. He first became involved with Jemaah Islamiah as a teenager. He was a diligent student at his Islamic high school, Al-Ianah. He travelled to
Afghanistan in 1983 to fight the
Soviet Union during the
Soviet invasion of Afghanistan. During his three years as a
mujahid, from 1987 to 1990, he met
Osama bin Laden. Friends and family in Indonesian say they didn't know of his activities overseas.
Jemaah Islamiah
He returned to Cianjur for one week, before going to
Malaysia, in 1991 where he met the two co-founders of JI,
Abdullah Sungkar and
Abubakar Bashir, who fled President
Suharto's
"New Order" in 1985. Nurjaman internationalized the terrorist group's activities. Nurjaman then took a new name in his permanent residence permit. He now was Riduan Isamuddin. The three were lived in housing compound in Kampung Sungai Manggis,
Banting,
Selangor. His nickname,
Hambali, is after
Hanbali, a school of religious law started by a revered
Islamic
imam from the 700s.
The two co-founders sent their students to "study" in Afghanistan and Pakistan. The students actually fought the Soviets until the Soviets pulled out of Afghanistan. A woman named Noralwizah Lee Abdullah had gone to Malaysia for religious schooling. She secretly married Isamuddin after meeting him at the Luqmanul Hakiem School in
Ulu Tiram,
Johor. The school was founded by Sungkar and Bashir.
Initially, Isamuddin struggled to make a living for his family. He switched from selling kebabs to patenting medicines. He soon disappeared from his home for weeks at a time, and he received many visitors at home. He eventually came to own a red hatchback and several cell phones. Investigators say that many calls on those cell phones were made to
Mohammed Jamal Khalifa, Osama bin Laden's brother in law, who had arrived back in
Manila,
Philippines in 1991.
After Arab visitors gave his family lots of money, he founded a shell company,
Konsojaya, in June 1994. Ostensibly an import-export company trading in
palm oil between Malaysia and
Afghanistan, it was essentially a front company for terrorism.
Wali Khan Amin Shah, who would become the financier of
Operation Bojinka, was a director of Konsojaya. The company provided financial assistance to the project until it was discovered by investigators on a laptop computer after an apartment fire on
January 6,
1995. Shah was arrested in the Philippines but escaped on a short order. Shah was arrested in Malaysia in December 1995. Both Shah and mastermind
Ramzi Yousef, who escaped the Philippines but was arrested in
Lahore,
Pakistan, were extradited to the
United States. They were both convicted and sentenced to life in prison for participating in the project.
Hambali goes underground
Hambali's company attracted attention of investigators so his dealings went quite for a while. He decided to preach, raise money, and recruit for his cause. He went underground in 2000 and started a wave of church-bombings in Indonesia. He always had a "hands-on" technique; he met his foot soldiers and came to them "with detailed plans, plenty of cash and two of his own bombmakers." He always fled before the bombing commenced. Meanwhile, the spiritual leader of Jemaah Islamiah,
Abu Bakr Bashir, was preaching
jihad at his schools while denying links to Islamic militants.
Hambali planned and attended the January
2000 Al Qaeda Summit in
Kuala Lumpur, Malaysia. Among the others present were two
September 11 hijackers,
Khalid al-Mihdhar and
Nawaf al-Hazmi. This gathering in Kuala Lumpur was observed by the
CIA and Malaysian authorities, but what specifically was being said at the meetings wasn't picked up. Hambali also provided money and documents to
Zacarias Moussaoui in October of that year.
After the
Bali nightclub bombing, in which 202 people were killed, Hambali received more attention from the United States. In the years leading up to the attack, the Indonesian government's action against Islamic militants had been minimal. Following the attack, Abu Bakr Bashir was arrested as part of a crack down on Jemaah Islamiah. He was wanted in Indonesia
for the bombings of several churches in the region, and wanted for the Bali bombing and a failed plot on several targets in Singapore.
Capture
Hambali used a series of safe-houses throughout
Southeast Asia, especially
Thailand and
Cambodia to move around. While he was in
Ayutthaya,
Thailand, 75 kilometers north of
Bangkok, he was planning a
terrorist attack against several Thai hotels and the
Asia Pacific Economic Cooperation summit (APEC) in
Bangkok on October 2003. The meeting brought together twenty-one leaders, including
George W. Bush, the
United States President. Hambali had used a false
Spanish passport to enter Thailand while his wife used her Malaysian passport.
Thai police found him as part of a joint operation between the Thai police and the
CIA on
August 11,
2003. The twenty uniformed and undercover police smashed down the door to his one bedroom apartment in Ayutthaya, and arrested him and 33-year old Noralwizah Lee Abdullah, a
Chinese Malaysian who was considered to be his wife. Hambali was wearing a pair of jeans, a t-shirt, a baseball cap, and a pair of sunglasses. Police also seized
explosives and
firearms in the property. It marked the end of a 20-month hunt for Hambali, who was 37 years of age when he was captured.
A 2006
Human Rights Watch report stated that Hambali was imprisoned in
Jordan for the account of the
CIA. On
September 6 2006,
President George W. Bush confirmed that Hambali had been held by the CIA and revealed that he'd been transferred to
Guantanamo Bay. His wife is now in
Malaysian custody.
On
September 8 2006 Indonesia formally requested access to Hambali to ensure a
fair trial. The
United States are reluctant to hand him over because of the lenient sentence Indonesia imposed on Bashir.
Hambali is also wanted in the Philippines for the transfer of explosives on Filipino soil in an attempt to transport them to
Singapore.
Detention
Following his capture the USA wouldn't confirm or deny that he was in their custody. But on
September 6 2006,
President Bush acknowledged the existence of covert, overseas
CIA interrogation centres (colloquially known as
black sites) and announced that 14 high-profile members al Qaeda and related groups had been transported from those sites to Guantanamo Bay. Those 14 include Hambali and an alleged lieutenant of his called
Mohammed Nazir Bin Lep alias Lillie or Li-Li.
Combatant Status Review Tribunal
Initially the Bush administration asserted that they could withhold all the protections of the
Geneva Conventions to captives from
the war on terror. This policy was challenged before the Judicial branch. Critics argued that the USA couldn't evade its obligation to conduct
competent tribunals to determine whether captives are, or are not, entitled to the protections of
prisoner of war status.
Subsequently the
Department of Defense instituted the
Combatant Status Review Tribunals. The Tribunals, however, were not authorized to determine whether the captives were
lawful combatants -- rather they were merely empowered to make a recommendation as to whether the captive had previously been correctly determined to match the Bush administration's definition of an
enemy combatant.
Identity
The transcript from Hambali's Combatant Status Review Tribunal identified his captive number as 10019.
Hambali's name was spelled differently on different official documents:
- His name was spelled Hambali, Riduan bin Isomuddin on the Summary of Evidence memo prepared for his Combatant Status Review.
- His name was spelled Ryuduan bin Isomuddin by Scott McClellan during a press briefing. McClellan spelled his name letter by letter.
- His name is spelled Riduan Isamuddin in the report of the 9-11 Commission.
- His name was spelled Nurjaman Riduan Isamuddin by the US Treasury.
Allegations
A memorandum summarizing the evidence against Hambali was prepared for his Combatant Status Reiew Tribunal on
February 9 2007.
According to the Department of Defense this determination means the fourteen men can now face charges before
Guantanamo military commissions.
However the military commissions faced by
Omar Khadr and
Salim Ahmed Hamdan dropped all charges on jurisdictional grounds on
June 7 2007.
Colonel Peter Brownback and
Captain Keith J. Allred ruled that the
Military Commissions Act only authorized the trial of "
unlawful enemy combatants", while the Combatant Status Review Tribunals had merely determined the captives to be "enemy combatants".
Further Information
Get more info on 'Hambali'.
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