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Southeast Asia
Cambodia to try Egyptian and Thai JI
2004-01-05
Cambodia is to put on trial an Egyptian and two Thais held in Cambodia since May on suspicion of links to Southeast Asian radical Muslim group Jemaah Islamiah, the judge in charge of the case said on Monday. Egyptian Esam Mohamid Khidr Ali, Hajichiming Abdul Azi and Muhammadyalludin Mading, teachers at a Saudi-backed Islamic school near the capital Phnom Penh, were picked up as part of a wider regional crackdown on suspected Muslim militancy. "The investigation is now over and we have enough evidence to charge them officially," investigating judge Oun Bunna told Reuters, although he said no trial date had yet been set.
"We'll just leave them in jug until we get around to it..."
Following the arrests, the trio were held while their case was investigated by a judge, as is customary under Cambodia’s French-based legal code. An official charge after an investigating judge’s inquiries leads directly to trial. Cambodian police raids last year led to the closure of the al-Mukara school and the expulsion of 28 foreign Muslim teachers and their families. Security sources said the raids were the result of a U.S. intelligence tip-off. The suspects’ lawyer, Khao Sopha, said his clients had done nothing wrong and had been charged with offences relating to international terrorism which were not even covered by Cambodian law.
"It ain't against the law to be an international terrorist in Cambodia!"
He demanded a trial as soon as possible and also criticised authorities for holding the three beyond the statutory six months permitted to the investigating judge. "They have detained my clients for more than they are allowed to do, and that is unacceptable," Khao Sopha said.
Shuddup. Neither is brewing jihad in somebody else's country...
Predominantly Buddhist Cambodia is home to a few hundred thousand ethnic Cham Muslims who have so far remained free of the Islamic militancy which has hit other countries in Southeast Asia. However, the United States is concerned Saudi-funded Islamic charities might be trying to radicalise the Cham, and make the deeply impoverished nation a haven for militant ’sleeper’ cells or suspects on the run.
Probably the Chams are afraid the Khmer will do hideously painful things to them if they get out of line. Given Cambodia's recent history, I'd be afraid of the same thing.
Hambali, an Indonesian preacher suspected of being Jemaah Islamiah’s brains and bin Laden’s regional lieutenant, spent around six months undetected in a Phnom Penh backpacker hostel before his arrest in Thailand in August, local security sources said.
Posted by:Dan Darling

#1  I totally misread the headline, I thought that the Thais were going to try out that old time Jamaah Islamiah way of doing things.

Glad to see it's good news!
Posted by: Tony (UK)   2004-1-5 2:36:44 AM  

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