Indonesia IS suspect was finance ministry official

Hundreds of radicals from Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim-majority country, have flocked to the Middle East to fight with IS.

January 27, 2017 12:54 pm | Updated 01:08 pm IST - Jakarta:

An Indonesian man detained for allegedly trying to join the Islamic State (IS) group in Syria with his family is a former finance ministry official who studied in Australia, authorities said on Friday.

The family of five, including three children, were detained on Bali island on Tuesday after being deported from Turkey following their arrest on suspicion of planning to cross into Syria and join the jihadists.

The Indonesian Finance Ministry on Friday identified the man as Triyono Utomo, an economist who had worked in two different departments at the ministry.

The 39-year-old completed his bachelor’s degree in Indonesia and then went to study in Australia, receiving his master’s from Flinders University in Adelaide in 2009, the Ministry said.

“In February 2016 he resigned as a public servant from the finance ministry because he wanted to manage a boarding school for orphans,” said ministry spokesman Nufransa Wira Sakti.

“After that he could no longer be contacted.”

The Ministry added it would not provide the ex-official with legal assistance.

Police say the former official and his family left Indonesia for Turkey in August and had planned to carry on to Syria.

Hundreds of radicals from Indonesia, the world’s most populous Muslim-majority country, have flocked to the Middle East to fight with IS, and authorities have detained a number on their return home.

Seventeen Indonesians were arrested last weekend after being deported from Turkey due to suspicions they were trying to reach Syria to join the jihadists.

The emergence of IS has provided a potent new rallying cry for radicals in Indonesia, which has long struggled with Islamic militancy, and sparked fears of a revival of long-defunct extremist networks.

A gun and suicide attack in Jakarta last year, that left four civilians and four assailants dead, was the first major assault claimed by IS in Southeast Asia.

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