Terrorism in Malaysia

Terrorism in Malaysia shifted from militancy promoting Communism to militancy promoting Islamism.[1] The most active terrorist organization in Malaysia is Jemaah Islamiyah.

Contents

Public views on terrorism

Former Prime Minister Abdullah Badawi gave a series of speeches in January 2007 on combating terrorism. He said Western governments needed to solve the Israeli-Palestinian conflict and the Occupation of Iraq, which he called a root cause of international terrorism.[2]

"Is this an Islamic issue? No. It is an issue of the people, of Muslims, non-Muslims, Christians and Jews, who have a right to return to the homeland when people have been expelled."[2]

"They want to react because [they think] their government is not reacting. That is the whole trouble. [They say]: 'You are not an Islamic government, so you have no feeling for the people,chigi for the Muslims who have been attacked, who have been marginalised and treated unjustly by other countries.' What is happening now in the Middle East has made even the moderates angry. That is not good."[2]

"Many Muslims aspire to set up an Islamic government. I don't think that Islam is the only way to solve all problems. A government that is just, a government that is trustworthy, that becomes people-centred, that is Islamic. We must see what a government professes, what the government does, and if it is good, that is Islamic. A government can have Islamic values, without the label Islamic. Between theatre and substance, I would declare more for the substance." Abdullah, speaking in London in January 2007, denied the clash of civilizations theory, calling disagreement in the global community a "clash of fundamental interests."[2]

Malaysian Terrorists

Azahari Husin and Noordin Mohammed Top are terrorists from Malaysia responsible and as key persons in bombing incidents in Indonesia[3].

Notable incidents

Malaysia Airlines Flight 653 crashed at Tanjung Kupang, Johor, on the evening of December 4th 1977,[4] the result of an apparent hijacking by unknown assailants as soon as it reached cruise altitude. It was the first and deadliest fatal accident for Malaysia Airlines, with all 93 passengers and 7 crew, from 13 countries,[5] killed instantly.[6][7] The plane had been en route from Penang International Airport to Singapore International Airport (Paya Lebar) via Sultan Abdul Aziz Shah Airport. The circumstances in which the hijacking and subsequent crash occurred remain unsolved.

See also

References

  1. ^ Islam, Terrorism and Malaysia's Response Asia Society
  2. ^ a b c d US Mideast policies 'radicalise' moderates Financial Times
  3. ^ Malaysia fugitive terrorist linked to Jakarta's suicide bombing xinhuanet
  4. ^ "A hijacked Malaysian airlines jet with 100 persons aboard exploded and crashed Sunday night". Associated Press. 1977-12-04. 
  5. ^ "Names list on the Tanjung Kupang Memorial plaque"
  6. ^ "Malaysia Airlines flight crashes with 50 on board". Agence France Presse. 1995-09-15. 
  7. ^ "Worst MAS plane crash occurred in 1977". New Straits Times: p. 4. 1995-09-15. 

External links