Islamic State propaganda targeting children found in Indonesia

A member of Hizbut Tahrir Indonesia wears a jacket with embroidery that reads "Caliphate leads the world" during a rally outside the presidential palace in Jakarta. File picture: Dita Alangkara/AP

A member of Hizbut Tahrir Indonesia wears a jacket with embroidery that reads "Caliphate leads the world" during a rally outside the presidential palace in Jakarta. File picture: Dita Alangkara/AP

Published Jun 26, 2017

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Jakarta - Indonesian police have found

hundreds of books containing Islamic State propaganda targeting

children at the home of a suspect arrested in connection with

the stabbing death of an officer, a police spokeswoman said on

Monday.

Another suspected militant was shot and killed by police

during Sunday's attack on a police station in Medan, the capital

of North Sumatra province.

The wife of the arrested man told police her husband had

spent six months in Syria in 2013, said police spokeswoman Rina

Sari Ginting, adding this was still being investigated.

Police believe the men were part of Jemaah Ansharut Daulah

(JAD), an umbrella organization on a U.S. State Department

"terrorist" list which supports Islamic State and has hundreds

of Indonesian followers.

"We can see from the pattern of their attack that it is

likely they belong to the JAD network," said Ginting.

There is concern about a rise of militancy in Indonesia,

which has the world's biggest Muslim population.

Islamic State sympathisers have carried out a series of

mostly low-level attacks over the past few years, and there are

fears about the return of hundreds of Indonesians who have gone

to Syria to support Islamic State.

The books aimed at children found at the home of the

arrested man were written in Indonesian and included pictures

and messages supportive of dying in jihad, or holy war, Ginting

said.

They appeared to be designed and printed by the suspect, she

said.

Police believe the suspects had intended not only to kill

police during Sunday's knife attack but also to seize their

guns.

Out of 12 people being questioned in connection with the

attack, one had been made a suspect and is alleged to have

helped the attackers by surveying the police headquarters, she

said.

Police were also investigating whether the attackers were

linked to three suspected militants who were arrested on June 6

in the area by anti-terrorism police. 

Reuters

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