Thursday, January 30, 2025

AFP, NSW Police should be very worried that antisemitic attacks show no “particular ideology” - Lack of ideology suggests that Mumbai 2008 type attacks organised by Dawood Ibrahim for Pakistan's ISI are now part of Australia's threat matrix

 by Ganesh Sahathevan 


Israel Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu with Moshe Holtzberg, the son of US Rabbi Gavriel Holtzberg, who was killed with his wife in the Mumbai November 26, 2008 terror attack, during a memorial for the victims of the attack at Nariman (Chabad) House in 2018. (Picture: AFP)



               


The SMH reported on 30 January 2025: 

Last week, Australian Federal Police Commissioner Reece Kershaw detailed intelligence suggesting “criminals for hire” could be behind some of the attacks, paid in cryptocurrency by foreign actors.

But there was little detail about who these alleged overseas agents could be.

There was no “particular ideology” or “any common links” between ideologies driving the attacks at this stage, Deputy Commissioner David Hudson said.

“But nothing’s excluded ... We pursue everything until we get to the truth,” he said.


One hopes that both Reece Kershaw and David Hudson understand that the absence of a  “particular ideology”  or “any common links” between ideologies suggests a much larger, more complex problem of terrorism, for it suggests that terrorism and jihadi activity in Australia has progressed to the level where state actors, and their proxies, are now carrying out acts of terrorism to further the objectives of the states concerned. The area is complex, but the example of Dawood Ibrahim and his work for and with Pakistan's Inter Services Intelligence (ISI)  is a good place to start for those new to the subject.

Dawood Ibrahim's D-Company is said to have been responsible for providing logistics for the Mumbai 2008 attack, acting on behalf of the ISI. Among the 166 killed were Gabi and Rivka Holtzberg  of Chabad House, a Jewish cultural centre in. Mumbai




To Be Read With 

Monday, October 26, 2015

NSW Police, AFP let loose jihadi financier: Dawood Ibrahim's

 Australian interests protected to win the Muslim vote?

by Ganesh Sahathevan

 NSW Police had these matters brought   to their attention in 2008, after the Indian gangster and ISI
operative Dawood Ibrahim was implicated in the 2008 Mumbai attack:

According to well placed sources, Dawood has vast business interests in the hospitality industry in the United Arab Emirates, Canada, Australia and India. Several shopping malls in the West and Australia are also reportedly owned by the family. An airline from a Central Asian republic is also being allegedly funded by the D-company.

NSW Police and the AFP (assuming intelligence is shared) were also made aware that there was 
within at least the legal  system a startling lack of understanding as to who Dawood Ibrahim is, as evidenced by no less than the High Court Of Australia who described him as the " benevolent Muslim industrialist, Dawood Ibrahim".


Despite all this ,Dawood Ibrahim's interests in Australia seem to have been ignored, even if the AFP kept a close watch on his rival , Chota Rajan aka Ranjendra Sadashiv Nikalje(see story below).
This looks like another case of the NSW Police and AFP appeasing the Muslim community, and both sides of politics doing whatever necessary to win the Muslim vote.
END 


Indian alleged mobster who lived in Australia, was arrested in Bali after being on the run for 20 years

  • October 26, 20156:56pm
Ranjendra Sadashiv Nikalje, who was wanted by Intertpol for year,s was arrested on Sunday as he arrived in Bali on a Garuda flight from Sydney, Australia.
  • Cindy Wockner and Komang Erviani
  • News Corp Australia Network
AN INDIAN alleged mobster’s 20 years on the run, most recently living in Australia, ended on the weekend when his plane touched down in Bali.
He was planning a 15-day stay on the holiday island. But now he is in a jail cell at Denpasar police station, nabbed as he left the plane which had flown him from Sydney to Bali.
The alleged boss of one of India’s major crime syndicates has been living quietly in Australia now for quite some time.
His charmed life, evading authorities across South East Asia for years, including a daring escape from a Bangkok hospital after he almost died, came to an end when last month he was identified living in our midst.
Australian Federal Police notified their Indian counterparts that the man using the name Kumar Mohan was in fact one of their most wanted — Ranjendra Sadashiv Nikalje also known as Chotta Rajan or Little Rajan or Nana — who is accused of involvement in more than 20 murders and a string of crimes.
Nikalje was arrested about 1.50pm Bali time on Sunday after arriving on a Garuda flight from Sydney.
Denpasar police general crime chief, Reinhard Habonaran Nainggolan, said authorities in Indonesia had been told he was alleged to have masterminded 15-25 murders in India.
He said local police were now co-ordinating with police headquarters in Jakarta about the process for extradition back to India.
Living it up ... Ranjendra Sadashiv Nikalje was on the way to Bali, Indonesia.
Living it up ... Ranjendra Sadashiv Nikalje was on the way to Bali, Indonesia.Source:Supplied
Nikalje has been on the run from authorities since about 1995 and was wanted on an Interpol Red Notice. However, as a Red Notice, is not an arrest warrant under Australian law he could not be arrested in Australia. Indonesian Interpol says the Red notice was issued in July 1995.
Nikalje’s Wikipedia entry claims that he began his criminal career scalping cinema tickets and went on to become a lieutenant of another gangster, the leader of the notorious D-Company crime gang.
The pair went separate ways in 1996 and in 1988 Nikalje is said to have fled to Dubai, where he allegedly continued to operate and pull the strings of his crime syndicate.
He then turned up in Thailand where his adversaries tracked him down and attempted to kill him, succeeding in gunning down his aides. In a Bangkok hospital after the attempt on his life and as Indian police put in place moves for his extradition, he is said to have escaped after bribing hospital staff.
He reportedly now suffers diabetes and requires kidney dialysis.
An Australian Federal Police spokesman said that in September this year the AFP had confirmed that Nikalje was living in Australia under another name and advised the Indian authorities and Interpol.
On Sunday Nikalje left Australia bound for Bali.
Interpol in Canberra alerted the Indonesian authorities who arrested him, at the request of India, when the plane landed.


 
 
 
Dawood Ibrahim's many lives

From Deepak K Upreti 
DH News Service New Delhi: 

The CBI's success with Abu Salem, a one-time key operative of the infamous D-company, has brought the focus back on Dawood Ibrahim, the criminal extraordinaire and prime accused in the Mumbai serial bomb blasts case. 

Dawood is learnt to have literally put on a new face, thanks to plastic surgery to escape the prying eyes of the International Criminal Police Organization after Washington declared him a "global terrorist". 

The US prompted the United Nations also into listing Dawood as a "global terrorist". While US order froze all assets belonging to him within the US and prohibited US nationals from transacting with him, the UN listing required that all UN member-states take similar actions. Dawood who lived in "style" in a posh locale of Karachi under the protection of the Pakistani Inter-Services Intelligence (ISI), is now desperately looking for a "safer hideout" outside Pakistan. 


It is believed that Dawood is now sharing his smuggling routes with Osama-bin-Laden's terrorist outfit al-Qaeda and funding attacks by Islamic extremists aimed at destabilising India. 

He is known to have financed the activities of Lashkar-e-Toiba, a group outlawed by the US in October 2001 and apparently banned by the Pakistani government in January 2002. The Lashkar is also suspected to be involved in the recent Delhi blasts. 

Apart from the 1993 Mumbai bomb blasts, Dawood is wanted in several cases including for drug trafficking, contract killings, aiding and abetting terrorism and so on. 

Dawood's influence in Mumbai filmdom with many top cine actors and actresses, directors and producers courting him and his henchmen is all too well known. Congress MP from Mumbai and Bollywood actor Govinda was recently in news for a video footage that caught him with the underworld criminal in Dubai. 

It is estimated that Dawood and his family own assets worth Rs 1720 crore including several buildings at prime locations of Mumbai such as Colaba, Crawford Market, Bhendi Bazar, Bandra, Oshiwara and Versova. Many of these are "benami" making it difficult to confiscate them. The family also has several builders, stockbrokers and jewellers operating as fronts for it. 

According to well placed sources, Dawood has vast business interests in the hospitality industry in the United Arab Emirates, Canada, Australia and India. Several shopping malls in the West and Australia are also reportedly owned by the family. An airline from a Central Asian republic is also being allegedly funded by the D-company. 

Apart from Salem, another erstwhile hit man to desert the D-company is Chota Rajan. It is alleged that Rajan is now targeting Dawood in tandem with the Indian intelligence agencies. 

Dawood's underworld saga appears to be "timeless" stretching many generations and is unlikely to see an end as long as his crime (business) syndicate keeps receiving political and police patronage within the country and as also from across the border in Pakistan. 

Salem's "homecoming" will have no significant impact on the deadly acts of the D-empire.


Jihadist wins immigration appeal

December 8, 2004 - 1:10PM

Page Tools





A man claiming to be member of an Islamic group who was arrested in India for planning a bomb attack today won a High Court case against Immigration Minister Amanda Vanstone.
The High Court ruled a member of the Refugee Review Tribunal (RRT) did not allow the man, known as Naff, procedural fairness.
It quashed the RRT's decision to refuse Naff refugee status and ordered it to redetermine his application for a review of the case.
Naff is a Muslim Tamil who said he was an active member of the Indian Union Muslim League and of a committee of the Jihad Movement.
He was president of an organisation in his village associated with a movement led by a benevolent Muslim industrialist, Dawood Ibrahim, whom he said he met in Bombay.
Naff was arrested with 30 other Muslims in India in December 1998 and accused of planning to plant bombs.
He said he was severely beaten before being released a few days later and later decided to flee India to save his life.
In March 2000, an Australian Immigration Department officer refused Naff's application for a protection visa, rejecting his claim he met Ibrahim in India and that he was involved with the Jihad Movement.
Naff applied to the RRT for review of that decision.
The RRT held a hearing into Naff's case in February 2002, with questioning revealing inconsistencies in his evidence, including the dates he was detained and the number of detentions.
At the end of the hearing, the RRT member told Naff that given the inconsistencies she would write to him asking for more information.
However, she failed to write and instead the RRT rejected his application, saying Ibrahim was regarded by Indian authorities as a gangster so he was unlikely to have travelled to India and met Naff.
The RRT also said belonging to the Jihad Movement contradicted Naff's claim of opposing violence.
The Federal Court of Australia dismissed Naff's application for orders quashing the RRT decision.
However, the High Court granted Naff special leave to appeal over the failure of the RRT member to write to him.
The court today held that with her closing remarks, the RRT member was acknowledging that the review's purposes had not been completely fulfilled.
"She was indicating that she had not yet finished receiving the presentation of arguments by the appellant which he had been invited to make," the High Court said in its judgment.
"She was saying that procedural fairness required some further steps to be taken.
"It is clear that the tribunal member was in the best position to judge whether the review process was incomplete.
"Her conduct is only consistent with the formation of a firm impression that it was."
The High Court held that depriving Naff of the opportunity to answer questions was a breach of procedural fairness and unanimously allowed his appeal.
It quashed the RRT's review decision and ordered it to redetermine the application for review.
- AAP


Sunday, January 26, 2025

"Clean out": Singapore has already positioned itself to take advantage of the Trump proposal to clean out Gaza, and redevelop the Strip into another Singapore ,as Ho Ching suggested


by Ganesh Sahathevan 





In appointing its first ambassador in residence to Israel, Singapore seems to be positioning itself for the rebuilding of Gaza. As  Ho Ching put it, Gaza has the potential to be another Singapore.

Singapore does so despite being surrounded by Muslims in Indonesia. Malaysia's PM Anwar Ibrahim has been particularly defiant in supporting HAMAS and when then President Of Israel Chaim Herzog visited Singapore in 1986 Malaysia , Indonesia and Brunei protested.

It is likely that Singapore has had discussions with Malaysia and Indonesia prior to this posting, which was announced on 31 October 2023, 24 days after the 7 October incident and the commencement of the Gaza War. It is not unlikely that like Singapore, Indonesia , Brunei and Malaysia also can see opportunities in the rebuilding of Gaza.


Given President Donald Trump's proposal to "clean out" Gaza the first steps appear to be have been taken to realise Ho Ching's suggestion, and Singapore's apparent ambition to make billions out of the redevelopment of Gaza.


END


See Also 

Why do Singaporeans like Trump? Survey findings hint at their pragmatism


Most respondents say Trump’s return to the White House is positive for Singapore, particularly among older Singaporeans.
Most Singaporeans have welcomed the return of US President Donald Trump to the White House, according to a quarterly survey, with the findings seen by analysts as a reflection of the respondents’ pragmatism and conservative values.
A total of 1,500 respondents from Singapore were asked by Blackbox Research whether Trump’s second term in office would be positive or negative for the city state.

While the findings released on Wednesday did not offer an insight into the values of the Singaporeans surveyed, David Black, founder of the market research firm, said the respondents found Trump’s traits as a “leader of action” appealing.


Kimberly Lim
Published: 10:00am, 24 Jan 2025




Saturday, January 25, 2025

Nasser Mashni 's Olive Kids charity may be funding terror group Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) activities in Australia, but Albanese and Wong don't really care

 by Ganesh Sahathevan 


Skynews reported in November 2023 that Australia Palestine Advocacy Network President Nasser Mashni 's charity, Olive Kids,  was funding the Popular Front for the Liberation of Palestine (PFLP) terror group.

Despite being designated a terrorist organisation by the United States the PFLP has been 

PFLP has been  prominent at Sydney pro-HAMAS rallies. Skynews also reported tat PFLP was found to have been involved in money laundering. Given that the PFLP has that ability it is not unlikely that money sent to  by Nasser and associates for widows and  orphans is then redirected in whole or in part for activities in Australia, including the highly disruptive pro-HAMAS rallies seen in Melbourne and Sydney which have gone on for over a year. 

 Given the AFP Commissioner Reece Kershaw's suggestion that foreign actors are financing jihadi activities in Australia , the likelihood of PFLP activities in Australia being financed from an offshore source that is ultimately Australian cannot be dismissed. Australia has after all proven to be a reliable and strong source of terrorist , jihadi, financing. 

There is nothing sophisticated or exceptional about this type of activity, so by appearing with Nasser Mashni at her office Penny Wong, and her prime minister Anthony Albanese seem to be signalling that they are happy to tolerate a certain level of money laundering and terrorist financing to the detriment of Australia's national interest, in furtherance of the Palestinian cause which they both hold dear. 





END
SEE ALSO 
The US State Department designated the PFLP as a foreign terrorist organization on 8 October 1997. The State Department designated the group a terrorist organization under Executive Order 13224 for the purpose of financial sanctions against it on 31 October 2001.

Wednesday, January 22, 2025

Australia's weekly anti-Israel protests serve to attract funding for the jihadi cause from all over the world, presence of Malaysian, Pakistani flags at marches illustrate the point.

 by Ganesh Sahathevan 


              Participants attend a Pro-Palestinian demonstration at Hyde Park in Sydney, Australia, 12 November 2023. EFE-EPA/FLAVIO BRANCALEONE AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND OUT

Australia's Gaza activists are very bankable . They are vocal and dedicated to the cause, marching every weekend for over a year and half.  They can easily attract funding from anyone here or elsewhere interested in or charged with financing jihadi or other Muslim resistance activities , and the  presence of the flags of Malaysia and   Pakistan  flags at marches in Australia  illustrate the point. 
Australian Federal Police chief Reece Kershaw cannot pretend that Australia  does  not have  an ever growing problem of jihadi terrorist financing, by calling it money from "foreign actors" for local thugs. 

END

See Also

HAMAS is funded by cryptocurrency, as are Reece Kershaw's synagogue burning "local criminal" - Kershaw must face facts, admit to the probability of jihadi terrorists being financed by HAMAS and its backers.

Thousands march in Australia demanding Gaza ceasefire




NOTES 

HAMAS has managed to remain well dressed and well armed despite losing its sources of funds in Gaza.
HAMAS has however found support in Malaysia, and Australia. Funding out of Malaysia can be safely assumed, given the public and defiant support of Anwar Ibrahim.
Funding out of Australia is a matter that demands immediate investigation by the Australian Federal Police and its state counterparts, given the fact that Australia was a major source of money and other resources, including fighters, for ISIS, and given the significant support for HAMAS in Australia.

https://lnkd.in/g4Y2P3Kq


https://lnkd.in/gudJeV9S



SEE ALSO 


Saturday, December 2, 2023

ISIS recruitment & training in Australia-An example of passive support for jihadi activities which cannot be ignored given the recent, significant support for HAMAS in Australia

by Ganesh Sahathevan 

NOTE: The articles below were published on the Terror Finance Blog.The Blog is no longer active and hence articles publsihed there are reproduced here


              Thousands in Australia join pro-Palestinian march over Gaza



« Wells Fargo in the middle of a Malaysian money laundering scandal | Main | ISIL,Al-Qaeda, Mosques & Daawah: Funders in common suggest a common purpose »

ISIS recruitment & training in Australia-An example of passive support for jihadi activities

by Ganesh Sahathevan

 

The article below reproduced from Sahathevan.blogspot.com  should be read in conjunction with my earlier posts on  the problem of passive supporters of jihadi activity.

by Ganesh Sahathevan



The following is an extract from a Monash press release(see full form below) quoting "terrorism expert" and lead investigator Greg Barton:

GTReC researchers found Australian militants and terrorists frequently consulted and consumed online extremist material but other factors played far more important roles in radicalising them. Their real world social networks of friends and family, and access to individuals who fought overseas or attended terrorist training camps were far more influential in affecting their thought and behaviour than materials circulating in the virtual world.

Lead chief investigator Professor Greg Barton said relationships, in the sense of social networks, belonging, and the allure of an enhanced sense of identity, play an important role in violent.


Australian jihadis are said to be very well prepared, and the best equipped for battlefield duties. As reported in The Australian:


THERE was something about the six Australians that made them stand out. Thousands of foreigners have ventured into Syria and Iraq during the past year for their journey to jihad; but, for locals who live along the border between Turkey and Syria, this group was different. As they sat drinking coffee before making their final walk into a foreign war, these Australians stood out: they were supremely confident, well-dressed and well-resourced. “It was clear they were not rookies,” says one local who watched them sitting at the coffee shop in Turkey about 50m from the border with Syria. “They seemed to know what they were doing.”


Locals watching the group were struck by several things. First, only one of them spoke Arabic and had to translate everything for the other five. He seemed to be their leader and looked to be in his 40s while the others were younger, in their 30s. Every so often he walked away from the group to talk on the phone, as if for privacy.

Second, they were clearly well prepared; they wore new, strong-looking walking boots, a contrast to many of the bedraggled jihadists who depart from this cafe clothed in little more than their well-worn attire and a desire to join the battle for Islam between Sunnis and Shi’ites. Good shoes and bags full of supplies were low on the list of priorities for those zealots.

Observers who saw the group of Australians said they seemed prepared for a long assignment. But what stood out most was their demeanour. They were calm, confident and relaxed. Locals noticed they all had Australian passports.

They were, one local commented, physically very large — he found them intimidating — and they wore the crocheted woollen caps popular with some Muslim men. All were “very beardy”.
(Unholy foot soldiers in a foreign fight THE AUSTRALIAN JULY 12, 2014)
 
It is obvious that these Australian jihadis had been trained professionally, were well funded, and had support of strong network of passive supporters. It is time for the Government, law enforcement agencies, and Muslim leaders, to tell us who these people are, and what is being done to eradicate the threat they pose this society.
 
END 
 
 
 

Understanding Terrorism in an Australian Context: Radicalisation, De-radicalisation and Counter-radicalisation
8 August 2013


The key findings from a four-year Australian Research Council-funded collaborative research project on terrorist radicalisation in Australia by researchers from Monash University’s Global Terrorism Research Centre (GTReC) will be released on Thursday 8 August.

The project, conducted in partnership with Victoria Police, Australian Federal Police, Department of Premier and Cabinet and the Victorian Department of Justice, is the most significant and in-depth examination of radicalisation undertaken in Australia.

Understanding Terrorism in an Australian Context: Radicalisation, De-radicalisation and Counter-radicalisationfocused on developing the understanding of radicalisation in an Australian context and sought international perspectives to enhance the understanding of violent extremism in Australia and relevant international threats.

Project members conducted over 100 interviews, including current and/or former violent extremists, in Australia, Indonesia, Europe, North America and elsewhere, from various ideologies (jihadist,far-right, far-left, IRA and Tamil Tigers). Also interviewed were many of the world’s leading counter-terrorism practitioners and analysts, and representatives from a variety of community groups, canvassing their attitudes on why some individuals become radicalised and ways community, government and religious stakeholders might work together to counter violent extremism. 

The role of the internet and on-line materials in radicalising some individuals was also thoroughly investigated. Online sources provided both the lethal inspiration and the technical know-how for Norwegian Anders Behring Breivik’s anti-Islam motivated terrorism in Oslo and Utoya Island in July 2011, in the attack Tamerlan and Johar Tsarnaev perpetrated at the Boston Marathon in April 2013 and the brutal murder of off-duty British soldier Leigh Rigby in Woolwich, London, in May 2013.

GTReC researchers found Australian militants and terrorists frequently consulted and consumed online extremist material but other factors played far more important roles in radicalising them. Their real world social networks of friends and family, and access to individuals who fought overseas or attended terrorist training camps were far more influential in affecting their thought and behaviour than materials circulating in the virtual world.

Lead chief investigator Professor Greg Barton said relationships, in the sense of social networks, belonging, and the allure of an enhanced sense of identity, play an important role in violent 
extremism. 

“Academics like to focus on ideas and ideology, but emotions, social bonds and experiences also play a crucial role. For many who become caught up in violent extremism social networks are much more important than ideology," Professor Barton said.

The findings also highlighted the importance of using, where possible, non-coercive measures to work with vulnerable individuals and groups to deflect and dissuade them from using violence to achieve their goals. These measures, commonly described as ‘CVE’ (countering violent extremism) initiatives, are becoming more prominent in Australia and overseas as many countries’ security services have observed that such ‘hard’ responses, by themselves, have often been ineffective, sometimes paradoxically increasing, rather than deterring the prospects of radicalising individuals. GTReC’s research highlights the effectiveness of including the social networks of radicalised or vulnerable individuals in countering violent extremism in both Australia and elsewhere.

CVE approaches prioritise interventions that are well ‘upstream’, averting problems before they are fully formed and give rise to criminal behaviour. Recognising key signs, or indicators, of radicalisation is an essential element of CVE. To this end GTReC researchers have developed a model that will enable a diverse range of practitioners to collectively recognise signs of radicalisation through observing indicative changes in behaviour, thinking and social relationships that, when occurring together and trending over time, point to reasons for concern and the need for some sort of intervention.

CVE also requires ‘downstream’ initiatives focusing on rehabilitation and helping individuals and groups disengage from violent extremism and re-engage with mainstream society. All forms of CVE require attention to both the individual and their environment.

For more information contact Glynis Smalley, Monash Media & Communications + 61 3 9903 4843 or 0408 027 848.

Posted by  on September 28, 2015 at 23:43 



by Ganesh Sahathevan « Terrorism and Fake Indian Currency Notes (FICNs): A Growing Menace | Main | The Muslim Brotherhood makes a play for Crimea »

The Problem Of Passive Supporters Of Jihadi Terrorists And The Putin Solution

by Ganesh Sahathevan

While I have previously taken a top-down approach to describing the networks that support  jihadists (see goo.gl/vBAolR) , the profileartion of Al-Qaeda franchises and off-shoots, such as those at work in Syriai requires that a bottom-up , or grassroots, approach be adopted.

While the top down approach looked at the support states provided jihadists, the bottom-up approach is concerned with how individuals at the grassroots can comprise networks that jihadists might rely on for their activities. Civil rights activists might be alarmed by such language, afraid that large sections of a given population could be branded jihadists, but there is in fact a theoratical framework and empirical  evidence to support this hypothesis.

Juan José Miralles Canals ii describes these types of networks using a mathematical and computer modeling approach:

Passive supporters of the jihadist cause are normal people who do not need to express their position explicitly. They just do not oppose a jihadist act in case they could. They are sharing independently an identical opinion of identifying with the jihadist cause. They do not need to communicate between then. This is an individual dormant attitude associated to a personal opinion. It does not need to be explicitly so. They are unnoticeable, and most of them reject the violent aspect of the jihadist action.

Social permeability to the jihad describes the physical pathways that nodes of the jihadist networks can establish and use to move freely and safely along, thanks to the passive supporters of the jihadist cause.

Social permeability to the jihad  describes the physical pathways that nodes of the jihadist networks can establish and use to move freely and safely along, thanks to the passive supporters of the jihadist cause.

Canals provides a mathematical analysis which concludes that disruption at the nodes is required to disrupt jihadists activities. Given what was seen in Iraq, and now Syria ,and well before these, Gaza, of apparently innocent non-combatants supporting the jihadists' cause, it does appear that Cannals theoretical perspective has and is being borne out in the real world.

I have previously written about the relevance to this day of the British Malaya administration's policy of new villagesiii, used to defeat the Communist Party Of Malaya, which while being financed by the Peoples' Republic Of China, relied heavily on the support of local Chinese to facilitate their activities on the ground.

That solution may today seem inhumane, but critics conveniently forget that lives were saved by that solution. Be that as it may, Russian President Vladimir Putin might have provided an alternative , a middle path:

Russian President Vladimir Putin has signed into law the controversial bill ….amending the Criminal Code to expand the number of offenses classified as terrorism and require the relatives of people deemed to have committed acts of terrorism to pay financial compensation for the material damage they causediv.

Not unexpectedly Putin's law has already come under criticism. However it is suggested that critics should rather see this law as the basis for other similair policy instruments that might be used to curb acts of terrorism. Either that, or a return to the new villages.

 

END

iii http://www.terrorfinance.org/the_terror_finance_blog/2007/04/ending_support_.html

iv Russia To Hold Relatives Of 'Terrorists' Financially Responsible For Material Damage

http://www.rferl.org/content/russia-terrorism-law-terrorists-financial-liability/25157756.html

Posted by  on February 25, 2014 at 18:10 | Permalink