Talks with Australia as Indonesia moves to tighten laws against Islamic State

1Britain's Prime Minister David Cameron (left) with Indonesian President Joko Widodo in Jakarta on Monday.
2The two discussed tackling Islamist militancy.
3Jakarta: Indonesians who join Islamic State or sympathise with the terrorist group will face criminal sanctions for the first time under draft laws that will significantly harden the country's counter-terrorism legislation.
4It follows consultations with Australia and other nations keen for Indonesia to strengthen its approach.
5The proposed laws come as Indonesia grapples with a surge in its citizens travelling to Syria and Iraq to fight with Islamic State, with an estimated 500 there, most assigned to their own military unit alongside Malaysian and Singaporean recruits.
6An estimated 500 Indonesians are thought to have travelled to Iraq and Syria to fight with Islamic State forces, seen here in Iraq.
7As Indonesia is failing to stem the outflow of jihadists, its judges have determined that being a member of Islamic State and undertaking paramilitary training with the militant jihadist group - also known as ISIS or ISIL - is not a crime.
8"The revised anti-terrorism law will make those who join ISIS or show sympathy to it a crime," the spokesman for Indonesia's anti-terrorism agency, Irfan Idris, told Fairfax Media.
9Mr Irfan confirmed his agency and other Indonesian officials had been receiving assistance from Australia.
10Expressing sympathy for the Islamic State group could become an offence under Indonesia's proposed laws.
11Between 2002 and 2009, 95 Australians were killed in terrorist attacks in Indonesia.
12The Australian embassy in Jakarta was also bombed in 2004, causing nine deaths, all Indonesians.
13Australia recently co-chaired a high level meeting examining options for Indonesia's counter-terrorism laws at the Jakarta Centre for Law Enforcement Cooperation, an Indonesian police facility that was developed with Australian financial support.
14As well as Indonesian and Australian intelligence analysts, police and officials, representatives from Britain, Jordan, the Netherlands and Denmark also participated.
15Afief Abdul Madjid, a cleric accused of joining Islamic State and undertaking paramilitary training in Syria, smiles after listening to his verdict in a Jakarta court on June 29.
16Mr Irfan said the laws would punish those who pledged allegiance to IS, as well as those who promoted its ideology and "concepts".
17The new laws are being drafted by the anti-terrorism agency, known as the Badan Nasional Penanggulangan Terorisme (BNPT), and the Ministry of Law and Human Rights.
18In an interview with Singapore's Straits Times newspaper published on Monday, Indonesian President Joko Widodo said his government would work closely with other countries on terrorism.
19"It is very important to improve our regulations on this," Mr Joko said.
20"We will put more provisions in our laws so we can prevent anyone planning to launch a terror attack."
21Local authorities have faced a number of legal setbacks attempting to prosecute Indonesians who have joined terror groups in the Middle East.
22They failed, for example, to have cleric Afief Abdul Madjid found guilty of terrorism offences for joining IS and undergoing paramilitary training in Syria.
23He was sentenced to four years in prison, half the penalty demanded by prosecutors, but only for his involvement in a terrorist training camp in Aceh five years ago.
24Another Indonesian IS member, Muhammad Saifuddin Umar, captured entering Syria and extradited home, could only be prosecuted for hiding former terrorist bombmaker Noordin Muhammad Top, who created havoc across Indonesia for almost a decade before his death in 2009.
25Meanwhile, other alleged IS members and recruiters have been brought to trial for passport violations.
26At least 12 upcoming court cases will further test the adequacy of Indonesia's anti-terrorism laws.
27Adhe Bhakti, a researcher at the Jakarta-based Centre for Radicalism and Deradicalisation Study, said there was a real danger the alleged offenders will get off, or be given light sentences, due to flaws in the law.
28Mr Irfan said the new laws would be presented to Indonesia's national parliament "as soon as possible".
29But Indonesia's parliament is notoriously fractious and inefficient and there is little evidence so far that its members see the counter-terrorism laws as a priority.