Showing posts with label Nahdlatul Ulama. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Nahdlatul Ulama. Show all posts

Saturday, August 6, 2011

Pluralism, Tolerance in Indonesia Under Growing Threat

Jakarta Globe, Indonesia
HOME
Pluralism, Tolerance in Indonesia Under Growing Threat
Zubaidah Nazeer-Straits Times Indonesia | August 06, 2011

Groups like Nahdlatul Ulama (above) and Muhammadiyah are being squeezed out by the raucous voices of radical organisations such as the Islamic Defenders Front. (AFP Photo)
Groups like Nahdlatul Ulama (above) and Muhammadiyah are being squeezed out by the raucous voices of radical organisations such as the Islamic Defenders Front. (AFP Photo)
Indonesia’s two largest Muslim groups count a third of the country’s population as followers, but appear to be losing ground in shaping the national conversation about Islam.

Drowned out by the raucous voices of Islamic political parties and confrontational hardline groups, Nahdlatul Ulama (NU) and Muhammadiyah are being squeezed out of the picture, which analysts fear could ultimately damage Indonesia’s brand of pluralism and tolerance.

The two groups boast a combined membership of 80 million and share a common goal of upholding Islamic teachings, but increasingly, it is the political parties and radical groups that are pushing the boundaries and setting the pace in trying to define what Islam stands for with their attacks on what they deem immoral behavior and deviant practices.

In 2008, for instance, the Prosperous Justice Party (PKS) lobbied for an anti-pornography law which banned some traditional cultural dances that were considered too sexy. Meanwhile, radical groups like the Islamic Defenders Front (FPI) and Hizbut Tahrir have made the headlines for attacking religious minorities such as the Ahmadiyah sect.

‘The order now has changed,’ said Broto Wardoyo, an analyst in terrorism studies at the University of Indonesia.

‘Political parties have taken on greater weight while groups like the Hizbut Tahrir have grown louder. They are easily heard, seem to attract an audience and can be remembered better.’

This development worries some Islamic scholars such as Zuhairi Misrawi, chairman of the Moderate Muslim Society, who fear an erosion of religious freedom if groups like NU and Muhammadiyah fail to speak up loudly enough and do more to put their stamp on community issues.

Zuhairi’s non-governmental organisation comprises mainly academics and intellectuals.

Agreeing, Syafi’i Anwar of the International Centre for Islam and Pluralism, added that sensational acts by radicals tend to grab attention.

NU and Muhammadiyah ‘need to find a way to remain in people’s minds’, he said.

That could prove challenging for the two organisations which were founded with relatively simple aims: to preserve Islamic teachings and provide community services.

NU, which turned 85 years old just three weeks ago, was set up by religious leaders, while Muhammadiyah, which is 99 years old, was founded by a Muslim scholar.

Together, they run more than 30,000 mostly religious schools across Indonesia.

NU is the bigger of the two, is seen as more traditional and has a large network of village boarding schools. Muhammadiyah, with 30 million members, draws a more middle-class crowd. It runs orphanages, hospitals and charity foundations.

With 80 per cent of the country’s 240 million people identifying themselves as Muslims - making Indonesia home to the world’s largest Muslim population - the role of these two organizations in shaping Islamic thought is crucial: Their messages are seen as able to influence even Muslims who are not their members.

Once they too had formidable political clout.

After the fall of President Suharto in 1998, NU and Muhammadiyah leaders set up rival political parties. Amien Rais, leader of Muhammadiyah, formed the National Mandate Party while Abdurrahman Wahid, better known as Gus Dur, set up the National Awakening Party, and later became president between 1999 and 2001.

However, in the past few years, especially after Gus Dur’s death in 2009 and as civil society blossomed, the political influence of both groups has waned even as extremist voices become louder.

Ms Robin Bush of the Asia Foundation in an opinion piece noted: ‘There is a perception expressed within both organisations that they are facing an identity crisis as the country modernizes.’

Added Mr Broto: ‘In the past, we used to identify people by their membership of the NU or Muhammadiyah. Now we say this person is PKS, this person is FPI, that other person is Hizbut Tahrir.’

The radical groups have also become emboldened by their seeming ability to get away with little or no punishment for acts like raiding stalls selling alcoholic beverages and killing Ahmadiyah sect members.

The authorities’ weak response, said Syafi’i, is ‘allowing such radical groups to hog the limelight’.

The numbers of hardliners are small, estimated at less than 1 per cent of the population, but their voices are louder because their extreme acts draw media coverage.

Some observers believe that a number of these groups are funded by political or military elites for their own interests. Law enforcers, meanwhile, hesitate to rein them in for fear of being seen as anti-Islam.

To be sure, both Muhammadiyah chairman Din Syamsudin and NU chairman Said Aqil Siraj have done their bit to condemn the actions of radicals. ‘We have been doing a lot of work such as preaching the positive side of Islam in our schools, holding seminars and talks, but they are not reported,’ said Said.

‘It does not mean we are not doing such work. Our plans are still running and we remain relevant.’

Analysts agreed that Muhammadiyah and NU still have an important role to play in nurturing the moderate ground, given their huge grassroots networks.

But to make sure their message gets through, the NU youth wing last month formed a new unit. Called Densus 99 - after the crack Densus 88 anti-terror squad - its mission is to counter the spread of radical views among the young.

Reprinted courtesy of Straits Times Indonesia.

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

NU Leader Asks for a Return to Peace in Islam

Jakarta Globe, Indonesia
NEWS
NU Leader Asks for a Return to Peace in Islam
April 20, 2011

The chairman of Nahdlatul Ulama, the country’s largest Islamic organization, on Tuesday repeated his call for Muslims to practice tolerance and peace.

“Islam means peace,” said KH Said Aqil Siradj, NU chairman. “Muslims might not reflect peace because of four factors: poverty, ignorance, Middle East-sponsored ideologies and incorrect interpretations of Islam.”

Speaking at a book discussion at the organization’s headquarters in Central Jakarta, Said Aqil said he lamented the fact that people had begun to forget the peaceful philosophy of Islam.

“In the 13 years the Prophet Muhammad spent in Mecca, he never declared war against those who practiced idolatry, nor did he order his men to destroy the statues.”

The idols were eventually destroyed when the people of Mecca converted to Islam.

“Muhammad, during his glory days, never declared Medina as an Islamic state. The word Medina means civilized,” Said Aqil said.

Said Aqil added that he was shocked by the suicide bomb at the Cirebon Police mosque last week. “NU has a well-established tradition in Cirebon, but that tradition was destroyed by a child last week,” he said.

Said Aqil also claimed that NU was under threat by Wahabi-funded foundations that dislike the traditional Islam of the group.

Yenny Wahid, the daughter of former president and NU senior figure Abdurrahman Wahid, said open discussion was needed to construct peace and reduce distrust among people.

“Without dialogue, there will be no knowledge, and our people can be easily provoked because they may not understand things,” she said.

Tuesday’s discussion was centered on a book published by Yenny’s Wahid Institute in collaboration with Buddhist organization Soka Gakkai titled “Dialogue on Civilizations for Tolerance and Peace.” The 309-page book recorded a 2-year correspondence between Abdurrahman and Buddhist leader and writer Daisaku Ikeda, and promotes a message of peace through continuous dialogue to bridge differences.

Meanwhile, dozens of members of the hard-line Islamic Defenders Front (FPI) and Force of the Defenders of Islam (LPI) sealed an Ahmadiyah mosque in Pekanbaru, Riau.

“What we did was on behalf of Islam, FPI is at the front as the coordinator and we are ready to face anyone including the law,” said Feli Rizieq, coordinator of FPI Pekanbaru.

Ulma Haryanto & Antara

Copyright 2010 The Jakarta Globe
URL: www.thejakartaglobe.com/news/nu-leader.../436400

Friday, March 25, 2011

Bombs Provide Ammo for Preaching Tolerance

Jakarta Globe, Indonesia
HOME
Bombs Provide Ammo for Preaching Tolerance
Zubaidah Nazeer- Straits Times Indonesia | March 25, 2011

Last week’s string of mail bombs sent to several moderate Muslim leaders in Indonesia have helped to highlight their work, even as loud noises made by radicals continue to chip away at the country’s heritage of tolerance.

These leaders say they are stepping up their activities and working with other groups to emphasise religious diversity and tolerance, and they do not want to rely on the government.

Some have been quietly engaging the Ahmadiyah sect, whose believers were attacked by a mob last month in Cikeusik, Banten province, West Java.

Said Mr Zuhairi Misrawi, chairman of the Muslim Moderate Society: ‘We have been working behind the scenes with other organisations which support pluralism, and engaging our grassroots through our leaders in all provinces. So we know that on the ground, the majority do not think and feel the same way as the radicals.’

He will be meeting representatives of the Ahmadis in Bogor today.

His organization has previously fanned out to the provinces to train young religious teachers, and distributed sermons to mosques with contents that counter radical ideas.

Others like Mr Hashim Muzadi, a former chairman of Nahdlatul Ulama, the largest moderate Muslim group in Indonesia, also oppose the use of force against minority groups. He said: ‘Islamic clerics across Indonesia need to work harder… to enlighten the Ahmadis so they come back to the right path. Whatever the reason is, violence is not allowed… not by Islam, by Indonesian national law, by human rights principles.’

Three Ahmadis were killed in the mob attack last month. Since then, there has been other news of attacks against them.

Though such incidents have sparked fears that Indonesia’s Muslims are increasingly becoming intolerant, several religious leaders remain optimistic that the silent majority will not be swayed by the ideology of hate. Instead, moderate Muslim leaders criticised the government for its handling of religious conflicts.

Mr Luthfi Assyaukanie, co-founder of the Liberal Islamic Network, told The Jakarta Post: ‘Religious intolerance and the radicalisation of Islam are getting worse. The government is failing.’

Added Mr Zuhairi: ‘The government inaction shows its weakness and ignorance in dealing with religious tensions.’

The Muslim Moderate Society is a member of the Alliance for Diversity and Religious Freedom, a band of 25 organisations from different faiths, including Christianity, Buddhism and Hinduism.

Pastor Johannes Hariyanto, secretary-general of the Indonesian Conference on Religion and Peace, said: ‘A lot of us who advocate pluralism have been engaged in regular dialogues for some time but… we should push to make the majority voice louder.’

He added: ‘Indonesia has a rich history of religious diversity and tolerance, but since the mid-1990s some groups have brought back rigid and extreme versions of Islam they were exposed to while studying in some Arab countries. These are not suitable for a secular, multi-religious society like ours.’

The mail bombs jolted many Indonesians as they were sent to those seen to be advocating religious pluralism, observers say. One was sent to Mr Ulil Abshar-Abdalla, founder of the Liberal Islamic Network. Another was sent to the youth chief of a nationalist organisation, while a third was sent to a rock musician who sings songs about Indonesia’s pluralism and diversity.

‘Yes, I am worried that pluralist Muslims are targeted, but we should not be discouraged,’ said Mr Zuhairi. ‘We should continue our work of spreading tolerance and reminding everyone that the Indonesian Constitution protects the rights of everyone to practise their beliefs peacefully.’

Reprinted courtesy of Straits Times Indonesia…

Copyright 2010 The Jakarta Globe
URL: www.thejakartaglobe.com/home/bombs.../431556

Dialogue Won’t Wait for Ahmadiyah

Jakarta Globe, Indonesia
NEWS
Dialogue Won’t Wait for Ahmadiyah
Camelia Pasandaran & Antara | March 25, 2011

Having missed out on getting its voice heard on Tuesday and Wednesday, the Indonesia Ahmadiyah Congregation has two more days to attend hearings at a national dialogue organized by the Religious Affairs Ministry.

The hearings are geared toward resolving an ongoing nationwide dispute over the minority Ahmadiyah sect, Religious Affairs Minister Suryadharma Ali said on Thursday.

He added that no amendment would be made to the schedule of the dialog simply to accommodate the wishes of the sect.

“If they want to come, we will be holding this dialogue on March 28 and 29. They could come on those days. If they have no intentions to resolve this matter, they should come and explain why,” the minister said.

The congregation, also known as the JAI, said it declined the invitation because of the short notice it was given, plus the venue — the Ministry of Religious Affairs.

Zafrullah Pontoh, the JAI’s national secretary, said on Monday that the invitation had only arrived on Friday, adding that the group had been allocated just four seats at the conference.

Wednesday’s talks saw a majority of the representatives agreeing to the complete disbandment of Ahmadiyah.

In a separate development, West Java Governor Ahmad Heryawan claimed that hundreds of Ahmadis had converted to the “correct” teachings of Islam following the recent issuance of local regulations banning the religious activities of the sect.

“Hundreds of Ahmadis have come to the correct path of Islam in West Java,” Ahmad said on Thursday.

“It is my hope that the figure reaches 500 Ahmadis.”

Copyright 2010 The Jakarta Globe
URL: www.thejakartaglobe.com/news/dialogue.../431551

Thursday, March 24, 2011

Indonesia’s Yudhoyono in the Cross Hairs

Irrawaddy News, Thailand
Regional
==
In this photo taken on February 18, 201, protesters shout slogans during a rally against the minority Muslim Ahmadiyah sect in Jakarta. (Photo: Getty Images)
In this photo taken on February 18, 201, protesters shout slogans during a rally against the minority Muslim Ahmadiyah sect in Jakarta. (Photo: Getty Images)
Indonesia’s Yudhoyono in the Cross Hairs
Thursday, March 24, 2011 By ASIA SENTINEL
It has seemed a mystery in recent weeks—why is the Ahmadiyah sect such a big issue all of a sudden in Indonesia?

Ever since a violent attack in early February by a mob of some 1,500 people killed three sect followers in a small village in West Java, it has seemed obvious that the campaign against the Ahmadis is coordinated and systematic beyond whatever “threat” an estimated 200,000 members could pose to Indonesia’s roughly 205 million Muslims.

On Tuesday, Al Jazeera English attempted to answer that question by airing long-whispered reports that “senior retired generals” are supporting Islamic hardliners to incite religious violence and overthrow Indonesian President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono.

“The generals are using the groups in their efforts to topple President Yudhoyono because they feel he is too weak and too reformist,” Al Jazeera correspondent Step Vassen said in the report.

Ahmadiyah, which is reviled because it believes its founder was the last prophet, not Mohammed, is an easy target with few allies. The attacks have put Yudhoyono in the position of having to reluctantly defend Indonesia’s tradition of tolerance against mob violence—a stance the Islamist hard liners use against him.

The network acknowledged that reports that the Islamic Defender’s Front (FPI), which has been linked to attacks on Christians and moderate Muslims in addition to Ahmadiyah, had powerful backing were not new. “This can now be confirmed for the first time,” Vassen said.

“This revelation shows that behind religious violence, a dangerous political power play is happening,” she said.

It is widely known in Jakarta that the police and military have long made use of groups like the FPI as a political battering ram. Businessmen often complain privately of FPI harassment, for example, saying it amounts to little more than a shakedown for money. And while the leadership may profess adherence to Islamic ideals, the rank and file of the hard-line groups are little more than the ubiquitous street thugs known here as premen.

If what the network says is true, however, it means that a more sinister game than extorting bribes with a fearsome street militia is at work.

In the Al Jazeera report, Chep Hernawan, leader of the Islamic Reform Movement (Garis), said, “The generals are fed up with the president’s lies.”

Chep said the generals had previously attempted to use a number of issues, including corruption, to foment a backlash against the president, “but they failed.”

A retired general himself, Yudhoyono is said to have numerous enemies among his fellow former officers, although in recent months, his political party has been in talks about joining forces with Gerindra, the party headed by former Gen Prabowo Subianto, who is likely to run for president in 2014.

Prabowo, a former in-law of the late President Suharto, has been linked to human rights violations and was once thought to be intractably opposed to Yudhoyono.

The one thing he has in common with Yudhoyono, however, is an apparent commitment to secular nationalism.

Insiders say Prabowo’s party might even supplant the Islamist Prosperous Justice Party, which has supported calls to disband Ahmadiyah and numerous other efforts to strengthen the hand of Islam in Indonesia.

According to Chep on Al Jazeera, the ex-generals wanting Yudhoyono’s head “are using the Ahmadiyah issue and it works.”

“The generals say Ahmadiyah has to be disbanded or we’ll have a revolution,” Chep said, adding that he was approached on the issue by a retired three-star general in January.

“He told me that we should keep fighting a jihad, we should not back down so the liar can be toppled.”

In December last year, the Setara Institute for Democracy and Peace named Garis as one of seven radical Muslim groups working to forge political alliances with moderate clerics. The FPI was also named as one of the seven.

In Tuesday’s report, retired Army Chief Gen. Tyasno Sudarto, a staunch government critic, told Al Jazeera about his support for groups that he said aimed to topple Yudhoyono in a “revolution.”

“We work together to enlighten each other. Our angle is different. They fight in the name of Islam, we use national politics but we have a common goal, which is change. We want to save our country, not destroy it. The revolution should be peaceful, not anarchist or bloody.”

Al Jazeera cited a Web site that detailed a proposed cabinet line-up for the so-called Islamic government, which listed Tyasno as security minister.

Muhammad Al Khaththath, secretary general of the Islamic People’s Forum (FUI), a leader of the anti-Ahmadiyah protests, said he was one of those that had drafted the line-up.

“I have met with generals who want to overthrow the president,” he said.

“I won’t say anything more.”

Al Jazeera said that most experts rated the chances of Yudhoyono being toppled as “slim.”

“But with former generals supporting hard-line groups, the battle to end religious violence seems hard to win,” correspondent Vassen concluded.

Copyright © 2008 Irrawaddy Publishing Group. All Rights Reserved.
URL: www.irrawaddy.org/article.php?art_id=20997

Fresh Attacks on Ahmadis as Peace Dialogues Begin

Jakarta Globe, Indonesia
NEWS
Fresh Attacks on Ahmadis as Peace Dialogues Begin
March 24, 2011

Bogor. Fresh from attending a trial hearing of men accused of burning down schools and an Ahmadi mosque in Bogor last October, some 20 men on motorcycles on Wednesday vandalized the home of an Ahmadi in the Cibuntu Kaum village of Ciampea.

The home belonged to Laswati, the mother of an Ahmadi leader, Ahmad Hidayat. Ahmad said the men on motorcycles stoned the house, breaking windows and damaging the roof.

“The attackers were a mob who had just returned from the Cisalada hearing,” Ahmad said following a trial hearing at the Cibinong District Court on the 2009 attack, which saw a mob of hundreds ransack and burn down houses, schools and a mosque in Cisalada village in Ciampea.

The village was home to 600 followers of the Ahmadiyah minority sect, which is deemed deviant by mainstream Muslims.

“According to witnesses [at Wednesday’s attack], there were at least five police officers present at the scene,” Ahmad said.

“They just watched the stoning and did nothing. Our position is really threatened now. This is the second time they have attacked Ahmadis in Ciampea.”

There were no reports of injuries. The attack came on the same day a national dialogue aiming to address the intimidation and violence faced by members of the Ahmadiyah was held in Jakarta.

Organized by the Ministry of Religious Affairs, the dialogue was attended by representatives from both liberal and hard-line organizations, but not the Ahmadiyah. The Indonesia Ahmadiyah Congregation (JAI) cited the short notice given for declining the invitation.

Zafrullah Pontoh, the JAI’s national secretary, said on Monday that the invitation had only been received on Friday, adding that the group had only been allocated four seats at the conference.

Attended by representatives from the Islamic Defenders Front, the Nahdlatul Ulama, the Muhammadiyah and the Indonesian Ulema Council to name a few, Wednesday’s talks, according to the Detik online news portal, saw a majority of the representatives agreeing to the complete disbandment of the Ahmadiyah.

“We are very disappointed that the Ahmadiyah did not send any representatives” ministry official Zainuddin Daulay said.

“It was a forum where they could have voiced their concerns, stated what it is that they need and how can we accommodate them,” he added.

“We are only here to do what is best for the Ahmadis.”

Zainuddin said the forum heard discussions from nongovernmental organizations, academics and Islamic scholars. “We are going to have two more meetings before coming to a decision,” he said. “We hope [the Ahmadis] can participate.”

Meanwhile, in a separate development, the Supreme Court has ruled that the trials of those allegedly behind the bloody violence that targeted the Ahmadiyah in Cikeusik, would be transferred from Banten to Jakarta.

Banten Governor Ratu Atut Chosiyah confirmed on Wednesday that Indonesia’s highest court had agreed to move the trail venue to Jakarta for safety reasons.

“As governor, I’m responsible for maintaining peace and stability in Banten,” Atut said at the Presidential Office in Jakarta. “Though I haven’t received an official response, I’ve been informed that the Supreme Court has approved our request.”

Atut said the province requested the move to prevent further clashes between Ahmadis and Cikeusik residents.

Students from Islamic boarding schools in Banten had previously threatened to stage demonstrations in Banten if the trials were transferred. Atut said the Banten Prosecutors’ Office had also requested the trials be transferred.

Copyright 2010 The Jakarta Globe
URL: www.thejakartaglobe.com/news/fresh-attacks...

Sunday, March 6, 2011

Government Warns Muhammadiyah Against Politicizing Ahmadiyah Issue

Jakarta Globe, Indonesia
HOME
Government Warns Muhammadiyah Against Politicizing Ahmadiyah Issue
March 06, 2011

Cabinet Secretary Dipo Alam has struck back at Indonesia’s second largest Muslim organization, which has been critical of the government’s inability to resolve the “Ahmadiyah problem.”

Dipo warned on Sunday against politicizing the Ahmadiyah unrest because it had the potential to “create communal conflicts.”

Commenting specifically on calls by Din Syamsuddin, the head of Muhammadiyah, for the government to ban the sect, Dipo said religious leaders needed to help maintain peace and tolerance in society.

Asked about Din’s call for the government to take action against a number of regional laws curtailing the rights of the Islamic sect, Dipo said the government had already issued a 2008 law banning the group from spreading their faith.

Hard-liners use the law to justify their attacks on the persecuted group.

Dipo said all elements in society should follow the law in dealing with Ahmadiyah.

He said regional governments should be aware of the law and were “responsible for the harmonious lives of their people.”

Late last month, Din said that Muhammadiyah’s stance on Ahmadiyah had not changed since it had issued a fatwa against the group in 1933. Muhammadiyah labels Ahmadiyah “misleading.”

Din said Muhammadiyah, however, would not actively seek the dissolution of the sect though the government needed to be firm in dealing with the issue.

“The government should be able to take firm action, instead of being hesitant. With its firm stance, it can prevent certain groups of people from … handling the Ahmadiyah problem,” he said.

“It is the state’s power to take stern action by referring to our Constitution because the existence of a group in society is the state’s business,” he said.

Din said Muhammadiyah would do its best to prevent its members from being mislead by Ahmadiyah followers.

Antara

Copyright 2010 The Jakarta Globe
URL: www.thejakartaglobe.com/home/government-warns.../426955

Friday, March 4, 2011

Muhammadiyah demands firm against on Ahmadiyah

NATIONAL
Fri, 03/04/2011
8:10 PM
Muhammadiyah demands firm against on Ahmadiyah
Antara, Jakarta
Muhammadiyah Chairman Din Syamsuddin has urged the government to take firm measures against Islamic sect Ahmadiyah, which believers are constantly under a threat of violence from the predominantly Sunni Muslims in the country.

“We ask the government not to let the problem drag on, because by ignoring and letting the issue continue, impatient people could take the law into their own hands,” Din said Friday after a dialog with Home Affairs Minister Gamawan Fauzi in Jakarta, state news agency Antara reported.

Also attending the dialog on Ahmadiyah with the home affairs minister were leaderships of Muhammadiyah and Nahdlatul Ulama (NU), both were among the largest Muslim mass organizations in Indonesia.

“Take firm action as soon as possible,” Din said because delaying to address the issue would provoke instability.

The state must not stand still when there is a group or organization asking other religious believers to join them, while the teaching insults Muslims, he said.

“It will create social unrest. The state must be present here, the government has the authority to enforce the law in order to prevent any unrest. But it should not take too long,” he said.

He suggested that the government should intensify giving guidance to Ahmadiyah followers. Islamic mass organizations are ready to help the government guide them, according to the Muhammidyah chairman.

“I personally would like to call on Ahmadiyah followers to come back to Islam, that Prophet Muhammad SAW is the last one. Islam clearly rejects a new prophet after Prophet Muhammad SAW,” he said.

Besides Din Syamsuddin, Muhammadiyah leaders attending the meeting with the minister were Muhammadiyah Secretary General Agung Danarto and Majelis Tarjih Chairman Syamsul Anward.

From NU, those who were present were NU Secretary General Syuhud, Deputy Chairman As`ad Said Ali, dan Katib Am Malik Madany.

Copyright © 2008 The Jakarta Post - PT Bina Media Tenggara. All Rights Reserved
URL: www.thejakartapost.com/news/2011/03/04/...ahmadiyah.html

Monday, October 18, 2010

Indonesian Vice President: Stand Up Against Radicals

Jakarta Globe, Indonesia
INDONESIA
Indonesian Vice President: Stand Up Against Radicals
Ulma Haryanto & Anita Rachman | October 18, 2010

Indonesian Vice President Boediono, left, with United States President Barack Obama at the Nuclear Security Summit in Washington DC in April. In the strongest comments by a senior politician yet against creeping radicalism, Boediono said the country must not abandon the basic principle that guarantees religious freedom for all. (EPA Photo)
Indonesian Vice President Boediono, left, with United States President Barack Obama at the Nuclear Security Summit in Washington DC in April. In the strongest comments by a senior politician yet against creeping radicalism, Boediono said the country must not abandon the basic principle that guarantees religious freedom for all. (EPA Photo)
Jakarta. Vice President Boediono has received cautious praise after calling on the “silent majority” to take a stand against a growing radicalism that he describes as threatening to take the country down a path of destruction.

“Once we allow radicalism to take over our way of thinking, it will lead us toward destruction,” the vice president said in a speech on Saturday at the opening of the Global Peace Leadership Conference, organized by Nahdlatul Ulama.

“Freedom of expression has been used by certain groups to spread hatred,” he added.

Though racism and interreligious conflict are fundamental issues that exist in most societies, Boediono said, Indonesians should protect the foundation upon which the country was built — the principle of unity in diversity. “Although Islam is the religion of the majority of people, Indonesia is not an Islamic state,” he said.

Boediono said the country must not abandon the basic principle that guarantees religious freedom for all.

To do this, he called on the silent majority to take a stand. “Radicals are usually vocal, though they are few in number. They drown out the silent majority,” he said. “But there are times when the silent majority must dare to speak out. We must loudly reject radicalism and return to the original agreement of the founding fathers of the nation.”

Pluralism advocates applauded him for speaking out strongly on a threat they have long warned of but that officials have paid little attention to. Week after week, stories of discrimination against minority religious groups fill news pages, and several surveys have pointed to a worrying increase in intolerance among Indonesians.

Dhyah Madya Ruth, chairwoman of Lazuardi Birru, a group that aims to educate young people about the dangers of extremism, said it was important that the government made a clear stand.

“We have to create a synergy between the government, the people and civil society organizations in solving this problem,” she said. “Most important in this is not just the silent majority, but the silent government has to make a firm stand.”

Burhanuddin Muhtadi, an analyst from the Indonesian Survey Institute (LSI), said that President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono had never strongly addressed radicalism.

In August Yudhoyono decried “groups that threatened the nation,” but his vague message could not be grasped by the public, Muhtadi said.

“He is too focused on his own image. He doesn’t want to be considered antagonistic toward Islamic hard-liners.”

Another important government figure who needs to stand up against those who promote hatred is the religious affairs minister, said Ulil Abshar Abdalla, the founder of the Liberal Islam Network and a Democratic Party politician.

“For example, in several Islamic gatherings people openly call for the banishment of [minority Islamic sect] Ahmadiyah. That should not be allowed,” he said, adding that he regretted that Religious Affairs Minister Suryadharma Ali had adopted a conservative approach that fostered radicalism. Suryadharma has openly advocated banning the Ahmadiyah sect.

Copyright 2010 The Jakarta Globe
URL: www.thejakartaglobe.com/politics/indonesian-vice-president-stand-up-against-radicals/401881

Wednesday, October 6, 2010

Nahdlatul Ulama (NU) asks Ahmadiyah to leave Islam

HEADLINES
Wed, 10/06/2010
4:13 PM

NU asks Ahmadiyah to leave Islam
The Jakarta Post, Jakarta

Nahdlatul Ulama (NU) has suggested that Ahmadiyah followers no longer claim themselves as part of Islam, citing widespread rejection from Muslims in the country.

NU deputy secretary general Enceng Shobirin told a discussion on settlement to Ahmadiyah problems on Wednesday followers of the religious sect would suffer from isolation if they insisted on associating themselves with Islam while violating the basic teaching of the religion.

Enceng said violence against Ahmadis would recur as mainstream Muslims deemed the sect as a threat to Islamic teachings.

“Let’s conduct a study to find a win-win solution. In other countries Ahmadiyah followers could behave themselves,” Enceng was quoted by kompas.com.

Another speaker in the discussion, NU deputy chairman Slamet Effendi Yusuf, said Muslims across the world did not recognize Ahmadiyah as part of Islam.

“Even in Pakistan, where Ahmadiyah was born, the religious sect is not recognized as part of Islam, but its followers could practice their religious teachings. This could be the best solution to the Ahmadiyah problem,” Slamet said.

The government is reviewing a joint ministerial decree on Ahmadiyah in a bid to find a permanent solution to the issue, following the latest attack on an Ahmadi enclave in the West Java regency of Bogor last Friday.

Unlike Islam, Ahmadiyah does not recognize Muhammad as the last prophet.

Friday, September 3, 2010

Indonesian Clerics Wary of Moves to Ban ‘Deviant Sect’

Jakarta Globe, Indonesia
Jakarta
Indonesian Clerics Wary of Moves to Ban ‘Deviant Sect’
Nurfika Osman & Candra Malik | September 03, 2010

Jakarta. Indonesia’s largest Islamic organization has warned the government against rushing to outlaw the minority religious sect Ahmadiyah, a day after the proposal sparked a fierce backlash from human rights watchdogs.

Masdar F. Masudi, deputy chairman of Nahdlatul Ulama, said disbanding religious groups was a form of violence.

“If we disband Ahmadiyah, we could anger [its] followers. We do not need to rush in dissolving Ahmadiyah, even if [the NU] is in clear dispute with them on Islamic teachings,” he told the Jakarta Globe on Thursday.

In House of Representatives hearings earlier this week, Religious Affairs Minister Suryadharma Ali said Ahmadiyah should be banned because it had angered mainstream Muslims.

If their activities are not banned, he said, the potential for conflict would escalate.

Ahmadiyah, founded in India in 1889, holds that the group’s founder, Mirza Ghulam Ahmad, was the last prophet — a belief that contradicts a tenet of Islam that reserves that position for the Prophet Muhammad.

Masudi, however, suggested holding a dialogue with the group to clarify issues.

“We have to conduct dakwah [spreading the word of Islam] wisely. And we believe in conducting dialogue with elegance. Remember, the Koran [says] nothing about the forcible conversion to Islam,” he said.

“If, after we have conducted a dialogue with them and they are still steadfast in their beliefs, [we will] leave them alone. The correct way, after all, is already clearly detailed in the Koran.”

Separately, NU chairman Said Aqil Siradj on Wednesday said any plans to ban the controversial Muslim sect must be studied “absolutely seriously.”

“Ahmadiyah has been in Indonesia since 1925. Why is it being made a problem now? This is not a local organization and is present in 102 countries around the globe,” he said.

According to Said, members of Ahmadiyah should be left alone, but should be “[forbidden] to spread their teachings outside.”

“They should be instead led to follow the right path through dialogue,” he said.

The suggestion to ban Ahmadiyah — declared by the Religious Affairs Ministry, the Home Affairs Ministry and the Attorney General’s Office as a deviant sect in a 2008 decree — drew criticism from several nongovernmental organizations.

Bonar Tigor Naipospos, deputy chairman of the Setara Institute for Peace and Democracy, said on Wednesday that Suryadharma’s comments could easily be used to justify attacks against Ahmadiyah members by hardline Islamic groups.

Meanwhile, Mohamad Guntur Romli, a noted Muslim intellectual and a graduate of Egypt’s Al-Azhar University, said on Thursday that Suryadharma was wrong to suggest banning Ahmadiyah.

“The religious affairs minister should not say things beyond his capacity that rile up the atmosphere,” he said.

“So far, the members of Ahmadiyah have never made problems for Indonesia. They do not undermine the authority of government, or attempt to conduct treason.”

Guntur agreed with the NU’s stance in calling for a peaceful resolution to the issue.

“From the time of [NU’s founder] Hadratus Shaikh Hasyim Asyari to [former President] Abdurrahman Wahid, the NU’s stance has been very clear: defend Ahmadiya’s right to live in accordance with their constitutional rights as Indonesians.”

Copyright 2010 The Jakarta Globe

Sunday, August 1, 2010

Calm restored in Ahmadiyah village amid heavy security

HEADLINES
Sun, 08/01/2010
3:39 PM

Calm restored in Ahmadiyah village amid heavy security
Nana Rukmana, THE JAKARTA POST, KUNINGAN, WEST JAVA

Calm has returned to a West Java village following violent clashes between villagers and Muslim hardliners with villagers resuming their daily activities.

However, there remains a heavy security presence with hundreds of police personnel patrolling the area, notably at the main entrance to the village, with trucks forming a barricade.

Ahmadiyah sect official Nurahim in Manis Lor village said the situation was returning to normal due to the heavy police presence.

Manis Lor, located 40 kilometers south of Cirebon city in West Java, is home to the largest Ahmadiyah community in the country with 3,000 of the 4,350 villagers following the faith.

Nurahim said Ahmadiyah officials were in talks with authorities and the Kuningan regency administration to address the recent attack on followers by hundreds of members of a number of hard-line Muslim organizations.

The attackers demanded Ahmadiyah followers cease all religious activities, saying the faith deviated from Islamic teaching.

“We are hopeful that peace will soon be restored,” Nurahim said.

The clash followed a failed attempt by the Public Order Agency to seal off a mosque belonging to the Ahmadiyah after facing resistance from the followers.

GP Ansor, the youth wing of Muslim organization Nahdlatul Ulama, announced it was ready to deploy thousands of members to protect Ahmadiyah followers.

The head of the Cirebon branch of GP Ansor, Nuruzzaman, said they had discussed the issue with the group’s Kuningan branch.

“Providing protection for citizens, including Ahmadiyah followers, is principally the domain of the government’s security institutions, in this case, the police. However, if needed, we are ready to help provide security. We can mobilize 20,000 members within a short time,” he said.

GP Ansor urged the central government to take serious measures to protect Ahmadiyah followers from violence, intimidation and vandalism of their places of worship. “We urge the government to act immediately against the violence perpetrated against Ahmadiyah followers.”

Nahdlatul Ulama, the country’s largest Muslim organization, is known for its moderate stance.

“The government must be consistent in its implementation of the Constitution, stipulating that every citizen of any official creed is guaranteed the right to conduct their religious practice according to their faith,” Nuruzzaman said.

Religious Affairs Minister Suryadharma Ali on Friday called Ahmadiyah apostate to Islamic teaching and urged them to halt propagating their beliefs, although he warned the public against resorting to violence in dealing with the issue.

Tuesday, July 13, 2010

Interfaith Relations in Indonesia Put to the Litmus Test

The Huffington Post, USA
July 13, 2010

Endy BayuniEndy Bayuni
Chief editor of The Jakarta Post and United Nations Global Expert
Posted: July 13, 2010 10:51 AM

Interfaith Relations in Indonesia Put to the Litmus Test

The tension between Muslims, the dominant religion, and Christians, the largest religious minority group, in Indonesia is coming to the fore with the open accusations by Islamic organizations in Bekasi, a town outside Jakarta, that churches have been aggressively converting Muslims in droves.

The Muslim groups, which include the local branch of the traditionally moderate Nahdlatul Ulama (NU) as well as the militant Front for Islamic Defenders (FPI), declared war against evangelism at the end of their congress in June. They set up a task force empowered to stop “Christianization” of Muslims in the township.

The congress would not have raised so much of an eyebrow if this was an affair involving the usual suspects like the FPI, which have of late been waging a “jihad” against people of other religions, including razing and vandalizing churches, harassing Christian masses, and attacking “misguided” Islamic sects like the Ahmadiyah. Militant, and at times destructive, these groups have never been seen as representing the mainstream Muslims in Indonesia, and most people would applaud if and when police stopped them from their violent behavior.

But the presence of NU representatives in the Bekasi congress, and the virtual silence of its national leaders as well as of other Muslim leaders who have taken part in many interfaith dialogues in the past, suggests their complicity if not of their shared concern about the activities of Christian evangelism in the country.

This could spell trouble for the relations between the religious communities in Indonesia, and raises questions about the effectiveness and sincerity of these interfaith dialogues, which were supposedly designed to build understandings and dispel mutual fears and suspicions between people of different faiths.

One of the criticisms about these dialogues is that they almost always involved the same leaders. Familiarity certainly helps to improve their communication but these dialogues have mostly excluded leaders of the more vocal or radical groups.

But any notion that the dialogues merely serve to preach the converted may also be far-fetching, as the Bekasi episode now shows. What guarantees do we have that those who participated in interfaith dialogues had seriously carried the message of peace when they went back to their flocks?

The Bekasi affair has opened up the Pandora Box of the fierce competition between different religious organizations in the battle for the soul of Indonesians, particularly between Islam and Christianity. With the 1945 Constitution guaranteeing freedom of faith, there isn’t any law that can stop any religious organizations from conducting their propagation activities with the aim of saving human souls.

A government regulation issued in 1978 forbids any attempt to convert people who already have a religion. This virtually limits evangelism in Indonesia to the eastern province of Papua, where Christian missionaries have been most active. But the regulation does not carry weight as it contravenes the constitution and it has been virtually ignored by all religious organizations, Christians and Muslims alike.

Mosques, churches, and to a lesser extent, temples, have seen their share of converting people into their religions without any interference from the state, in Jakarta as in most other cities across the archipelago. There are no statistics to show who is winning the battle, but Muslim groups lately seem bent on stopping the conversion out of their religion. Religious conversions happen for many reasons, whether through the acts of propagation, through daily contacts or marriages, but there is nothing that the state can do about what is constitutionally regarded as the rights of individuals.

Religious propagation is mostly conducted discretely rather than openly, and this allowed the leaders of different religions to remain courteous with one another as they meet in the interfaith dialogues. Leaders of mainstream Islamic organizations were also able to distance themselves from the violent behavior by the likes of the FPI.

But the Bekasi affair, in which the Muslim groups have declared war against Christianity, and the complicity, if not the silence, of the traditionally moderate Muslim organizations, has now raised the stake. The last thing Indonesia needs is a religious war on a larger scale than the one we saw erupting in Maluku 2000.

While dialogue remains the best and probably the only course to avoid a religious confrontation in Indonesia, it is time that these religious leaders start addressing the serious issues and have a hard and serious discussion, instead of avoiding them. It would help if they were also sincere and honest in these dialogues.

Thursday, July 1, 2010

Local residents nix sharia-based bylaws

Headlines
Thu, 07/01/2010
7:51 AM

Local residents nix sharia-based bylaws

Hasyim Widhiarto, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta

Residents, politicians, activists — and at least one actor — in Depok and Tangerang urged their cities to reject sharia-based bylaws.

Implementation of such regulations will make the regions prone to inter-religious conflicts, agreed several residents and activists.

The Depok municipal administration must seek approval from both the Muslim majority and local minorities if they want to implement sharia-based bylaws or policies in the city, said Mangaranap Sinaga, the coordinator of the Depok-based Inter-religious Youth Forum.

“All residents, especially minorities, need assurances that such bylaws will guarantee their rights to religious freedom and also give no leeway for [Muslims] hard-liners to outlaw the existence of the country’s beneficial laws,” Mangaranap told The Jakarta Post on Wednesday.

Mangaranap said it was also important for the city’s moderate religious organizations to unite and support each other so that they could take a strong position when discussing sharia with hard-line organizations and local political elites.

“Dialogue alone is not enough, sometimes we also need to be more political,” he said.

The forum, which was launched earlier this month, gathered six religious-based organizations in Depok to discuss and respond to threats to pluralism in the city.

The organizations include Nahdlatul Ulama’s Ansor Youth Movement, Indonesian Christian Youth Force Movement, Catholic Youth, Buddhist Youth Generation, Persada Hindu Dharma and Konghucu Youth Generation.

Actor-cum-politician Derry Dradjat, who wants to run for deputy mayor in Depok’s next election, said there was no urgent need to implement sharia-based bylaws in the city.

“Instead of creating a new conflict, why don’t we just refer to the existing laws,” he said.

Depok, a city on Jakarta’s southern border, is currently governed by Nurmahmudi Ismail, who was supported by the Islamic-based Prosperous Justice Party (PKS) in 2005.

Nurmahmudi has faced strong criticism from many non-Muslim residents who claim that they have been unable to obtain permits to build churches under his administration.

The mayor has been criticized for allowing hard-line organizations, such as the Islam Defenders Front (FPI) to pressure minorities, such as members of the Ahmadiyah sect and the transgender community.

In 2006, the Depok city council planned to deliberate a draft ordinance banning prostitution but has made no progress after several years.

Implementation of sharia-based bylaws started even earlier in neighboring Tangerang,

A number of women have been arrested when returning home from work after authorities began enforcing a 2005 bylaw banning prostitution in the city. Human rights activists have called for the bylaw to be revised.

Immanuel Malirafin, 43, a Catholic living in Kotabumi, said that although he heard of the bylaw, he never learned about it in detail.

“Some of my Muslims neighbors told me that the bylaw imposed a curfew on women, but I never understood why it was implemented,” he said.

Sharia bylaws are only allowed only in Aceh province, as a conditions of its special autonomy following a 2005 international agreement that ended decades of war.

After the introduction of regional autonomy in 1999, bylaws regulating private conduct and morality have sprouted in dozens of regencies and municipalities in the coutnry.

Friday, May 14, 2010

Displaced Ahmadiyah followers take part in national census

---The Jakarta Post, Indonesia
Archipelago | Fri, 05/14/2010 9:48 PM

Displaced Ahmadiyah followers take part in national census

Panca Nugraha, The Jakarta Post, Mataram, West Nusa Tenggara


Around 120 Ahmadiyah followers taking shelter at Wisma Transito building took part in the national census and were listed as residents of Mataram city in West Nusa Tenggara (NTB), although many had no valid identification.

Head of the Mataram Central Bureau of Statistics (BPS), Peter Willem, said Friday the followers of the controversial sect had taken part in the census, which ends May 31.

“We registered them as residents of Mataram since they have lived in the city for the last six months,” Peter told The Jakarta Post.

He said the refugees were registered using the regular form just like other residents.

The form, he said, did not mention their status as refugees.

“It’s because the census does not query data on the status of refugees”.

Peter said the BPS did not single out the census pattern and treatment between Ahmadiyah refugees and other residents.

Some 136 families or 157 people of the Ahmadiyah sect, considered heretical by the Indonesian Ulema Council, have been living in the shelter for four years since being evicted from their homes in West Lombok by angry mobs.

Some had left or moved to other provinces but some 33 families of 126 people remain.

URL:  
www.thejakartapost.com/news/2010/04/21/discourse-blas...99.html

Saturday, May 8, 2010

Indonesia’s Blasphemy Law: The Regulation of Faith by the State

---Qantara, Germany

Indonesia’s Blasphemy Law
The Regulation of Faith by the State

The Indonesian Constitutional Court has endorsed the country’s controversial blasphemy law, which many liberal politicians and human rights activists regard as a relic of the past that could further exacerbate religious tensions. Christina Schott reports from Jakarta

Targeted by the radical Islamic Defender Front:
Religious minorities like the Ahmadis, who do not
conform to orthodox concepts of Islam, are
particularly affected by the blasphemy law
“Infidel!” “Let us spill his blood!” These were the kind of threats Indonesian director Garin Nugroho had to endure in early April this year.

In his capacity as a cultural expert, he testified before the highest constitutional court of his country that a 45-year-old blasphemy law wholly discouraged Indonesians from discussing religion, as it did not allow them the freedom to hold their own opinions.

“This law is the biggest setback for democracy and pluralism in the history of our nation,” the internationally-acclaimed filmmaker declared. The followers of various radical Islamic organizations, such as the Islamic Defender Front (FPI) or Hizb-ut Tahrir Indonesia (HTI), who were waiting outside the courthouse, were able to follow his testimony on a screen. They were clearly of a different opinion.

Validation for the hardliners

Nugroho got off lightly, however, in that he was only verbally abused. Four other experts were beaten and kicked on their way to court. The judges upheld the disputed paragraphs nonetheless. With only one vote against, the nine-person body decided in April that the old law was not unconstitutional and was “indispensable for religious harmony in the country”.

A coalition of Indonesian human rights groups under the leadership of the Wahid Institute had applied for a legal revision of the blasphemy law. In their opinion, the law, introduced after a coup attempt in 1965, contradicts the Indonesian constitution, which guarantees religious freedom.

Six religions are officially recognized in Indonesia, which has the largest Muslim population in the world: Islam, Protestantism, Catholicism, Hinduism, Buddhism and Confucianism. Followers of minority religions, such as Sikhs or animists, are tolerated, but those who do not profess one of the six official religions cannot hold an identity card or obtain a marriage certificate.

In practice, it is not possible to be an atheist in Indonesian society. Divergent religious orientations within the recognized religions also face difficulties. According to the blasphemy law it is illegal to publish, recommend or even seek public support for non-orthodox interpretations of faith.

As a result, interpretations of Islam that do not accord with either the Sunni or the Shia faiths are subject to legal prosecution – and all too often they are also persecuted outside the law.

Persecution of the Ahmadi


Adherents of the Ahmadiyya movement, who consider themselves Muslims but do not believe that Mohammed was the last prophet, have been particularly badly affected.

Many Ahmadis had to go into hiding after violent attacks by radical Islamists. On the island of Lombok hundreds of families are still living in refugee camps because they daren’t return to their home villages. Instead of punishing the attackers, the government forbade all public activities related to Ahmadiyya Islam.

“Religious freedom will always be restricted, because if it is unrestricted it could compromise the freedom of the majority,” says Saleh Daulay, the secretary for law and human rights of Muhammadiyah, the second-largest Islamic organization in the country. “It is our duty to protect the established belief of a majority from interference. If we didn’t have the blasphemy law, we would no longer have any basis from which to prevent social unrest.”

“The blasphemy law is not going to solve the
religious conflicts in this country!“ - Masdar Farid
Mas’udi, legal expert for the Nahdlatul Ulama (NU)

In practice, the law has primarily been applied in Indonesia to punish offences against the main streams of Islam. As well as sect-like groups like the Ahmadis, individuals have also increasingly been targeted. In May 2006, for example, the Muslim woman governor of Banyuwangi in East Java was nearly ousted from office after being accused of practising a religion other than Islam. The background to this was that she was married to a Hindu.

In December 2008 a Christian primary school teacher was arrested on the Moluccas because she was said to have made disparaging remarks about Islam during class. On the basis of this rumour alone, hundreds of furious Muslims destroyed 67 houses, a church, and a meeting hall. Five people were injured. Only two of the rioters were arrested.

No resolution of religious conflicts

“The blasphemy law is not going to solve the religious conflicts in this country,” stated legal expert Masdar Farid Mas’udi of the Nahdlatul Ulama (NU), Indonesia’s largest Islamic organization, in the daily newspaper Jakarta Post.

“The court should have defined the terms blasphemy and heresy more precisely. If you follow the current interpretation, Islamic preachers should in fact also be criminalized for their diatribes against other religions.”

Mas’udi, however, is pretty much alone in his opinion. Both his own organization, the NU, which is regarded as moderate, and Muhammadiyah joined the radical Islamists in speaking out against a repeal of the blasphemy law. The Parisada Hindu Dharma Indonesia (PHDI), Indonesia’s highest Hindu council, and the Indonesian Buddhist Council (Walubi) were also in favour of retaining it.

The only vote against the court’s decision came from constitutional judge Maria Farida Indrati, who one month earlier was also the only one in the body to oppose another highly controversial law, that against pornography.

In her opinion, the blasphemy law is a product of the past and is no longer compatible with today’s constitution – especially in respect of the preservation of human rights and religious freedom.

“Officially, we have religious freedom in Indonesia, but in reality it’s not that free,” says Dwi Nurdianto (not his real name), who works for a social organization in Yogyakarta on Java.

“On paper I am a Muslim, although I am in fact an atheist. But I’m not allowed to be an atheist here. If I don’t belong to any religion, I can’t get official papers. And if certain people came to know my true beliefs, what would happen would be something like the scenes in front of the constitutional court. The state should really be protecting minorities from persecution. Instead, it’s arguing that it has to protect the majority.”

Christina Schott
© Qantara.de 2010
Translated from the German by Charlotte Collins
Editor: Lewis Gropp/Qantara.de

Wednesday, April 21, 2010

Court justices accused of ‘distorting’ testimonies

---The Jakarta Post, Jakarta
Headlines | Wed, 04/21/2010 9:03 AM
Court justices accused of ‘distorting’ testimonies
Arghea Desafti Hapsari, The Jakarta Post, Jakarta

The Constitutional Court has again become the target of criticism following its ruling on the controversial Blasphemy Law, with plaintiffs accusing the judges of distorting the opinions of expert witnesses.

Just weeks after giving the nod to the divisive pornography law in late March, the Court on Monday ruled to uphold the 45-year-old law on religious blasphemy. Only one judge, Maria Farida Indrati, had a dissenting opinion.

But this held no sway in the final outcome as the Court turned down a judicial review request by human rights groups and high-profile figures such as late former president Abdurrahman Wahid and progressive Muslim scholar Siti Musdah Mulia.

A lawyer for the plaintiffs, Uli Parulian Sihombing, on Tuesday criticized the way judges had claimed that the National Commission on Human Rights (Komnas HAM) had recommended keeping the law when in fact the latter had requested revisions to be made to it.

The panel of judges in its argument said that of the 24 parties whose testimonies were heard, two — Komnas HAM and the Indonesia Confucianism High Assembly (Matakin) — had said that the contested articles in the law were still needed and should not be revoked before a new and more comprehensive regulation was enacted.

Chief justice Mahfud MD did not return numerous calls from The Jakarta Post on Tuesday.

Komnas HAM chairman Ifdhal Kasim, who testified in February, said several articles in the law needed to be revised. He argued that the law “rests on the old Constitution, which opposes the new [amended] Constitution”.

“That’s why, based on the new Constitution, there needs to be a review [of laws] produced by former administrations,” he said.

The law stipulates criminal penalties for those who intentionally publicize, recommend or organize public support for a different interpretation of the six officially recognized religions.

Opponents say the law has been used to persecute members of religious minorities and of traditional beliefs, including when members of the Ahmadiyah sect were forced to take refuge after enduring violent attacks against them. The Court, however, said the law was needed to maintain public order.

On Tuesday, Uli also said that judges had not made an objective decision based on facts and evidence.

Indonesian Ulema Council (MUI) chairman Amidhan, on the other hand, expressed his support for the Court ruling. He said that the law was needed to maintain harmony among religions. “Without the law, there would be chaos. I fear people would take the law into their own hands,” he added.

Amidhan also said that the law could be revoked only if Indonesians were “wiser”. “But the people are not as wise as in the US, where religion is a personal matter,” he told the Post.

Masdar Farid Mas’udi from Nahdlatul Ulama, the country’s largest Muslim organization, voiced a different opinion, despite the organization’s official position supporting the court’s ruling.

He said that by keeping the law, the numerous Islamic preachers who criticized other religions and therefore broke the law “would now have to be prepared to be arrested and face criminal charges”.

“They are the ones who supported this law and they cannot be above it,” he said.

URL: www.thejakartapost.com/news/2010/04/21/cour...80%99-testimonies.html

Tuesday, April 20, 2010

Indonesia under fire for upholding scripture over rights

---Yahoo News (via AFP)

Indonesia under fire for upholding scripture over rights
by Stephen Coates Stephen Coates – Tue Apr 20, 2:16 am ET

JAKARTA (AFP) – Human rights groups pilloried Indonesia’s constitutional court Tuesday after it upheld a 1965 blasphemy law, ruling in favour of orthodox religions over basic freedoms.

The court on Monday rejected a petition by moderate Muslims, religious minorities, democracy advocates and rights groups against the law, in a case seen as a major test of the mainly Muslim country’s pluralism.

By a margin of eight to one, the judges ruled that the law was imperfect but did not contravene the constitution of the world’s most populous Muslim-majority country, which guarantees freedoms of belief and expression.

The law carries a maximum punishment of five years for beliefs that deviate from the orthodox versions of six sanctioned faiths: Islam, Buddhism, Hinduism, Catholicism, Protestantism and Confucianism.

The US Commission on International Religious Freedom, a non-partisan body that advises the US government, said the ruling may embolden religious extremists and foster sectarian strife.

“Hopefully, the Indonesian government will recognise that overturning the blasphemy decree advances its fight against terrorism and extremism, and enhances its reputation for religious tolerance and pluralism,” commission chairman Leonard Leo said.

The law – which effectively outlaws blasphemy as well as heresy – was used in 2008 to force followers of the Islamic Ahmadiyah sect to go underground and is often cited by minorities as a source of discrimination and intimidation.

Islamic extremists packed the court throughout the hearings, heckled witnesses for the petitioners and allegedly assaulted their lawyers on the last day. They greeted the ruling with shouts of “Allahu Akbar” (God is greater).

About 500 police were deployed around the court due to concerns that a ruling against the law would trigger violence by militants from the Islamic Defenders Front (FPI), a vigilante group.

Several of the judges said they agreed with the testimony of Religious Affairs Minister Suryadharma Ali and Justice and Human Rights Minister Patrialis Akbar that the law was needed to protect minorities from violence.

FPI official Sobri Lubis also claimed the law was vital to maintain religious harmony in the vast archipelago of 234 million people, 90 percent of whom are Muslims.

“We’re very happy with the verdict… This will bring peace of mind to the people,” he said.

US-based Human Rights Watch (HRW) however said the ruling “dealt a severe blow to religious freedom” in the world’s third-largest democracy, which President Barack Obama is scheduled to visit in June.

“Indonesia?s laws should protect those who peacefully express religious views and punish those who threaten to use violence against others, not the other way around,” HRW deputy Asia director Elaine Pearson said.

“If the government wants to prevent violence, it should send a message by punishing violent behaviour.”

US expert Professor Cole Durham, who testified via videolink on behalf of the petitioners, said the decision “represents a missed opportunity” to reconcile the law with Indonesia’s international treaty obligations on human rights and bring the country into line with the trend in other democratic countries.

“This legislation empowers those in dominant religions to persecute and discriminate against those holding divergent views, and this in turn will exacerbate religious tensions in society,” he told AFP.

Moderate Muslim scholar Ulil Abshar Abdallah said the court did not seem to understand the constitution.

“Our constitution clearly guarantees freedom of expression. The law will become a time bomb in the future as it will muzzle minority groups that are different from the six mainstream religions,” he said.

Indonesia court upholds blasphemy law

---Yahoo News (via AP)

Indonesia court upholds blasphemy law
By CHRIS BLAKE, Associated Press Writer – Tue Apr 20, 12:19 am ET

JAKARTA, Indonesia – A decision by Indonesia’s constitutional court to uphold a controversial blasphemy law has dealt a severe blow to religious freedom in the world’s largest Muslim-majority country, a rights group said Tuesday.

The court ruled Monday that the 1965 law, which allows for criminal penalties and bans on people or groups that “distort” the central tenets of six officially recognized religions, was in line with the constitution and was vital to religious harmony.

The law was challenged by a coalition of rights groups and civil society organizations who consider it discriminatory. But it is supported by religious conservatives, including the radical Islamic Defenders Front, which had gathered at the court and threatened to protest if the judges didn’t uphold it.

Although the law recognizes six official religions in the country — the standard forms of Islam, Catholicism, Protestantism, Buddhism, Hinduism and Confucianism — rights activists say it discriminates against minority religions, including Muslims whose beliefs differ from the mainstream.

The vast majority of Indonesia’s 235 million people are moderate Sunni Muslims.

Opponents say the law, which carries penalties of up to 5 years in jail, should be struck down because it limits religious freedom — which is constitutionally protected in this secular country.

The court rejected those concerns in its 8-1 decision. The majority said the law was in place to protect all religions from desecration and to ensure religious harmony between faiths. They said the law did not bar other religions such as Judaism from being practiced, but simply protected those covered by the law.

“The law should be upheld because if it is annulled … Islam and the Quran could be interpreted at will and people and figures could declare new prophets and establish new religions,” Minister of Religious Affairs Suryadharma Ali said ahead of the ruling.

Critics say the law is vague, allowing authorities to interpret and enforce it how they choose. It has largely been used against those seen as offending mainstream Islam.

They also say hard-line Islamic groups have used the law as justification for violent attacks on minority religious groups.

The government has used the blasphemy law in the past to outlaw religious groups, including Ahmadiyah, a minority Islamic sect banned in 2008 whose members identify themselves as Muslims but don’t believe in the core tenet of Islam that Muhammad is the last prophet.

Elaine Pearson, deputy Asia director at Human Rights Watch, said in a statement Tuesday that the court decision “poses a real threat to the beliefs of Indonesia’s religious minorities.”

“The blasphemy law criminalizes the peaceful expression of certain religious beliefs,” she added.

The dissenting judge called the law weak, saying it could be interpreted in multiple ways that lead to discrimination. The judge said the law was written during a revolutionary era when Indonesia’s authoritarian rulers were worried about social unrest and that the law wasn’t needed in modern Indonesia.

“The judges closed their eyes and hearts,” said Chairul Annam, one of the lawyers arguing for the law’s repeal. “We are very sorry that discrimination suffered by minorities in this country was not recognized by the court.”
___
Associated Press writer Niniek Karmini contributed to this report.

URL: http://news.yahoo.com/s/ap/20100420/ap_on_re_as/as_indonesia_blasphemy
 
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