http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/home/indonesian-religious-thugs-attack-bekasi-christians/390191

Indonesian Religious Thugs Attack Bekasi Christians
Ulma Haryanto | August 09, 2010



Indonesia. Another mob attack on Christian worshipers in Bekasi on Sunday has 
led to renewed calls for police and national leaders to crack down on the 
apparently swelling tide of religious violence. 

About 20 members of the Batak Christian Protestant Church (HKBP) in Pondok 
Timur Indah were chased and beaten with sticks by a mob believed linked to the 
hard-line Islamic Defenders Front (FPI) after they tried to conduct Sunday 
services at a field in Ciketing, Bekasi. 

The HKBP church house had been sealed by authorities in June as part of the 
agreement between Bekasi Mayor Mochtar Muhammad and Murhali Barda, the leader 
of the Bekasi chapter of the FPI. 

Witnesses said the attackers appeared to be FPI members, and the attack comes 
just a day after Jakarta Governor Fauzi Bowo drew criticism for attending the 
hard-line group's anniversary party and asking it to report abuses of religious 
laws over Ramadan, which begins this week. 

Saor Siagian, the church's legal representative, said more than 20 members of 
the congregation were assaulted on Sunday. "We already reported this to the 
National Police and I also accompanied them for a medical examination at the 
Kramat Jati Police hospital," he said. 

"[Onlookers] and the police were just watching while they cornered me and the 
others," said the Rev. Luspida Simanjuntak of the HKBP, who said she was beaten 
with a stick. 

Although the attackers claimed they were neighborhood residents, FPI's Murhali 
was on hand and locals identified the attackers as outsiders, said Indra 
Listiantara, a researcher with the Setara Institute for Democracy and Peace, 
who witnessed the violence. 

"I checked myself with local residents. They said all the demonstrators were 
members or affiliates of the FPI who had demonstrated against the churchgoers 
on previous occasions," Indra said. 

Habib Salim, head of the Regional Board of Council of FPI Jakarta, denied the 
organization had been involved. 

Nur Kholis, a member of the National Commission for Human Rights (Komnas HAM), 
said it was monitoring the case and that it was time for the central government 
to step in. "The problem has dragged on and on. When the regional government is 
no longer able to solve the matter, it is time for the governor along with the 
Religious Affairs Ministry to take over," he said. 

Nasaruddin Umar, director general for Islamic affairs at the ministry, voiced 
his disapproval of the violence and said he would appoint an official from the 
regional office to follow the matter. 

"Any violation of the law has to be acted upon. I am going to request the 
regional office to make a written explanation before I decide what steps to 
take," he said. 

Setara called on the police to make good on promises of firm action to quash 
religious violence. "The National Police must halt this mass anarchy and 
provide full protection to all worshipping activities," program manager Ismail 
Hasani said in a press release. He said that insufficient police personnel was 
no excuse. 

"President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono has to order the National Police chief to 
act firmly against this attack by a mob that has repeatedly engaged in violence 
in Bekasi," he said. 

Legal expert and former police officer Bambang Widodo Umar agreed that the 
force should get involved. 

"Interreligious affairs are still a sensitive issue in the country. However, 
judging from previous incidents, the police should know that whenever different 
religious groups are involved, it means they should bring more enforcement," he 
said. 

Several "Twitter activists" agreed to meet with FPI leader Habib Rizieq today 
to discuss the increasing violence. "It is time for people to act ... We have 
to do something, and this is the least that I could do," Mira Meulia-Siregar, 
an architect and mother of two, told the Jakarta Globe. She could not yet say 
how many people would take part in the visit. 

Fauzi came under fire on Sunday for attending the FPI's 12th anniversary bash 
the day before, along with Jakarta Police Chief Insp. Gen. Timur Pradopo. He 
was also criticized for asking the group to help make sure that the laws and 
regulations were respected during Ramadan, including the prohibition on 
nighttime entertainment. 

"Fauzi Bowo not only acknowledges the existence of thuggery, he sanctions it. 
His attendance there was not correct," said Ulil Abshar Abdalla from Nahdlatul 
Ulama, the nation's largest Islamic organization. 

Rachland Nashidik, from the Democratic Party, was quoted by Vivanews as calling 
on his party to admonish Fauzi, a party patron, for failure to stand up for the 
Democrats' drive for pluralism.




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