http://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2010/04/13/bogor-church-runs-services-street-after-closure.html

Bogor church runs services on the street after closure

Theresia Sufa and Hasyim Widhiarto ,  The Jakarta Post ,  Bogor/Jakarta   |  
Tue, 04/13/2010 9:25 AM  |  Headlines 

Local administrations in the country often opt to bow to pressure from 
anti-pluralism groups at the expense of legal certainty when it comes to church 
building permits.

The most recent victim of local administration weakness was the Indonesian 
Christian Church (GKI) in Taman Yasmin housing complex in Bogor, West Java, as 
the Bogor administration withdrew the church building permit on Saturday to 
placate protests from residents. 

The administration said they had to take such a decision following protests 
from nearby residents and several Islamic organizations, which joined together 
under the Indonesian Muslims Communication Forum (Forkami), in strongly 
opposing the establishment of the church.    

“We are very confused with the sudden sealing off,” GKI reverend Ujang 
Tanusaputra said on Sunday. “For more than two years, we could not run the 
construction of the church smoothly as local residents continue to protest.  

On Saturday evening, without prior notification, a group of officers from Bogor 
public order agency sealed off the entrance to church which was under 
construction. 

After the closure, hundreds of members of the church congregation had no option 
except to run their Sunday service on the street in front of their sealed 
church.  

According to Ujang, the GKI congregation obtained a building permit from Bogor 
municipality in July 2006. 
The administration, however, retracted the permit two years later, citing 
endless protests from local residents against the church.

The congregation filed a lawsuit against the mayor’s decision to the Bandung 
Administrative Court (PTUN), which later overturned the decision. The 
municipality then submitted a legal appeal to the Supreme Court but once again 
failed to win the dispute. 

“But they [the administration] never take the court’s decision into their 
account,” Ujang said.   

Contacted separately, head of Bogor public order agency Bambang confirmed that 
the agency’s Sunday action to seal off the church was an order from the Bogor 
mayor. 

Data from the Indonesian Communion of Churches (PGI) shows that more than 10 
churches have suspended services due to mob threats this year. 

Last month hundreds of members of hard-line Islamic organization Hizbut Tahrir 
Indonesia’s (HTI) Bogor branch staged a rally in front of the Bogor City 
Council, claiming that the church construction committee had submitted faked 
residents’ signatures to obtain the building permit.  

Earlier this month, members of the Filadelfia HKBP church congregation in 
Bekasi, West Java, decided to sue Regent Sa’duddin for unilaterally closing 
their church while under construction following protests from local Muslim 
residents.  

According to a 2006 joint ministerial decree, a new house of worship must have 
the support of at least 90 congregation members and 60 local residents of 
different faiths. 

It also has to obtain a recommendation letter from the Religious Affairs Office 
and the government-sponsored Regional Interfaith Communication Forum (FKUB) 
before gaining final approval from the local administration.

Experts and activists, however, have raised their concern about how the rule on 
the number of signatures needed on a petition to apply for a permit to build a 
house of worship is applied, since the FKUB or the local administration often 
rejects applications if even the slightest objection is raised — particularly 
if those objecting are Muslims.

“That’s why I always urge those facing such problems when trying to build a 
house of worship to take the case to court,” Trisno Susanto, from the NGO 
Interfaith Dialogue Society (Madia), told The Jakarta Post recently

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