INDONESIA
By Jennifer Yang Hui
East Asia Forum-June 21

In the wake of high-profile terrorist activities in Indonesia, social media’s role in violent extremism is once again under scrutiny. The 36-hour standoff on 8 May 2018 between inmates linked to the so-called Islamic State (IS) and prison officers at Mako Brimob (the detention center of the Indonesian National Police Mobile Brigade on the outskirts of Jakarta) provides some clues on how extremists use social media, especially to ‘crowdsource’.

The term ‘crowdsourced terrorism’, whereby IS outsources the conduct of attacks to its followers and attempts to attract them to Syria, first emerged in 2014. Relevant cases include the knife attack in Leytonstone subway station in east London and the shooting in San Bernardino in the United States in December 2015. These events signaled what former US secretary of homeland security Jeh Johnson called an ‘entirely new phase in the global terrorist threat’.

Read more at: http://www.eastasiaforum.org/2018/06/21/crowdsourcing-terror-in-indonesia/
First published in: East Asia Forum