https://www.newmandala.org/between-throwing-rocks-and-a-hard-place-fpi-and-the-jakarta-riots/


Between throwing rocks and a hard place: FPI and the Jakarta riots

*IAN WILSON* <https://www.newmandala.org/author/ianw/>* - 02 JUN, 2019*

*69*

*455*





Many of the questions surrounding who was responsible for the violence that
erupted in Jakarta on 21–22 May will likely never be answered. Prevailing
theories suggest roles for a mix of interests and actors, involving paid
thugs, religious extremists, opportunists and mysterious gunmen. But there
is little clarity on which, if any, of the gaggle of contesting elites may
have “masterminded” the unrest, or what precisely they sought to gain from
it.

In this respect there are strong resonances with the violence of almost 20
years earlier in May 1998, albeit on a far lesser scale. Then, the
still-mysterious shootings of students at Trisakti University and rioting,
both orchestrated and spontaneous, left over 1,200 dead and large parts of
Jakarta in flames, leading to the resignation of Suharto after 32 years in
power. That some of the key actors involved in both the violence of 1998
and 2019 are the same poses unsettling questions about how much has changed
in 21 years of *reformasi*.

One group that emerged out of the turmoil of 1998 was the Front Pembela
Islam (FPI). There is significant conjecture over precisely what role FPI
played in Jakarta’s most recent violent episode. In many respects this
political moment seemed tailor-made for FPI, given its well-trained prowess
in capturing political tensions and mobilising these along divisive
fault-lines, on which it seeks to capitalise socially and politically. As
events unfolded, however, FPI appeared to be caught between contradictory
sets of imperatives, its internal divisions and vulnerability to political
backlash more apparent than ever.
*Outsiders no longer*

FPI came to play a central role in Prabowo’s organisational coalition and
election campaign in 2019. It had offered conditional support to Prabowo in
the presidential elections in 2014, but it was with Ahok’s defeat in the
2017 Jakarta gubernatorial election, and his subsequent conviction for
blasphemy, that the alliance consolidated. This was considered a major
success by FPI, with its years of agitation, smear campaigns and
street-level mobilising finally gaining the recognition and logistical
support it believed it deserved. The *so-called 212 movement that it had
spearheaded*
<http://www.understandingconflict.org/en/conflict/read/69/After-Ahok-The-Islamist-Agenda-in-Indonesia>
provided
a strategic template to be reproduced on the national stage, with the main
target now being the Widodo administration.

This alliance has helped to push FPI, previously considered a street-based
vigilante group, further into the centre of Islamic and national politics.
In the wake of Prabowo’s electoral defeat FPI has remained unfaltering in
its support even while his political party coalition fragments around him.
This is in part due to high-profile roles given to several FPI clerics
within his campaign team, not least of which is FPI’s Grand Imam, Habib
Rizieq Shihab. In self-imposed exile in Saudi Arabia since 2017 *to evade
pornography charges*
<https://www.nytimes.com/2017/05/30/world/asia/rizieq-shihab-pornography.html>
, *since dropped*
<https://www.thejakartapost.com/news/2018/06/17/police-drop-porn-case-against-rizieq.html>,
Rizieq has featured heavily in Prabowo’s campaigning and been crucial to
articulating the *parameters of polarisation*
<https://www.newmandala.org/indonesias-election-and-the-return-of-ideological-competition/>
upon
which the election *was at least partly fought*
<https://www.newmandala.org/how-polarised-is-indonesia/>. His image
frequently appeared in campaign banners as a transcendent holy figure
hovering above Prabowo Subianto and his vice-presidential candidate
Sandiaga Uno, intimating some kind of spiritual guidance.

FPI’s seemingly steadfast loyalty and rhetorical bombast, however, is also
tinged with desperation. Having committed so deeply to a Prabowo victory,
it now faces the political reality of having nowhere to go, vulnerable to
criminalisation by a second-term Jokowi administration not reluctant to use
the legal system to target its critics.
*Jakarta riots: mastermind or onlooker?*

Despite the weeks of build-up amid calls by Prabowo’s coalition for a
“people power” movement to overturn what they claim was an election result
marred by systematic corruption, initial protests outside Bawaslu (the
elections watchdog) were, for their organisers, disappointingly small.
Rizieq’s calls for preparatory “defend the nation” committees to be
established around the country also failed to gain traction, and beyond the
several thousand who gathered in central Jakarta there was little in the
way of critical mass elsewhere in the rest of the country. Efforts by
police to block convoys of protestors heading to Jakarta were relatively
successful, combined with the impact of calls from Nahdlatul Ulama and
Muhammadiyah forbidding members from attending.

*RELATED**
<https://www.newmandala.org/questioning-prabowos-alliance-with-islamists/>*
*Questioning Prabowo’s alliance with Islamists*
<https://www.newmandala.org/questioning-prabowos-alliance-with-islamists/>

Disputes that mark this pragmatic alliance should worry Islamists that
Prabowo may disregard their demands.

*AZIS ANWAR FACHRUDIN*
<https://www.newmandala.org/author/azis-anwar-fachrudin/>* 15 MARCH, 2019*

It was as the Bawaslu demonstration began to disperse mid-evening that
violence erupted, allegedly instigated by groups not involved in the main
protest. Events soon descended into a tear-gas blurred mele, with battles
between the police and groups of demonstrators spreading to the adjacent
districts of Tanah Abang. Seemingly caught off guard by the speed at which
rioting violence spread, at one point police and robed FPI clerics joined
forces to attempt to block a mob entering the neighbourhood of Petamburan,
home to FPI’s Jakarta headquarters, only to be forced back by a hail of
rocks. Situated little more than a literal stone’s throw away from FPI
headquarters, a Brimob paramilitary police dormitory was targeted by the
rioters, with several vehicles burnt.

While on the ground local FPI clerics joined with police in a vain effort
to hold back rioters, FPI’s *laskar* militias appeared largely absent,
posing questions over whether they were unprepared for what transpired or
deployed elsewhere. It is worth noting that it is has long been an
established “policy” within the organisation that FPI members only wear
uniforms and attributes for humanitarian or advocacy work, whereas violent
“sweeping” operations are done in “civilian” clothes. This is in order to
give the impression vigilante action is a “spontaneous” reaction of the
community and provide a degree of deniability if things get out of hand.

In the aftermath of the violence, FPI’s Jakarta branch leadership issued a
press release claiming it was the victim of an elaborate set-up, citing
unnamed “provocateurs” intent on implicating FPI in the violence by
bringing the rioting to their organisational heartland in Tanah Abang.
Habib Muhsin Alatas from FPI’s central advisory board called it “part of a
scenario to wipe out FPI”.

Yet while these Jakarta-based figures initially *shared conciliatory ground*
<https://indonesiainside.id/wakil-kapolres-jakarta-barat-sambangi-markas-fpi-petamburan/>
with
the police, this was promptly obliterated in a statement from Rizieq
released on 28 May, in which he claimed that the police, not
“provocateurs”, were solely responsible for the violence. The eight who
lost their lives in the rioting, including three FPI members, were heralded
as martyrs. Singling out Brimob, whose dormitory near FPI’s headquarters
had been attacked, Rizieq accused the police of gross human rights
violations, arguing that “proportionate” retaliatory violence was
legitimate.
*A victim of its own success?*

Despite Rizieq’s inflammatory grandstanding, the implications of the
violence for FPI are strategically unfavourable.

FPI’s influence and popularity has expanded significantly in the wake of
the anti-Ahok and 212 mobilisations, but this has come with some costs. One
has been a reduced presence in Jakarta’s neighbourhoods and streets.. FPI
began as a street-based vigilante group deeply embedded in local social and
economic life, but has over time shifted to an emphasis on high-level
political brokering and on-demand displays of symbolic militancy.

At the same time as its capacity to draw together a more demographically
and ideology diverse array of people has increased, it has relinquished
some of its grassroots presence, no longer possessing the same level of
local infrastructure as groups such as Forum Betawi Rempug or Pemuda
Pancasila, both of which shifted their political support from Prabowo to
Jokowi in what now appears to be a more astute strategic calculation of
political fortunes.

This has several implications for understandings of the dynamics of the
Jakarta riots. One is that FPI have had to rely heavily on mobilising
branches in Bekasi, Bogor and Banten, as well as parts of West Java such as
Tasikmalaya and Majalengka, to bolster its numbers for Jakarta-based
demonstrations. The high profile of Habib Rizieq as an oppositional
Islamist figurehead in exile has become a drawcard but has also produced
shifts and tensions within the organisation. FPI has long worked as an
umbrella able to accommodate everyone from street gangsters to the more
ideologically militant. The political expediency of the Jakarta branch’s
leadership has, at times, grated with the stridency of some regional
branches, who may have come to Jakarta with the intent of forcing Bawaslu
to overturn the election results, just as Rizieq’s rhetoric had implied
they should.

This speaks to a broader problem of FPI becoming a victim, of sorts, of its
own success, with its rhetorical extravagance outstripping its
organisational capacity to exercise effective control over what is done in
the Grand Imam or the organisation’s name. As several media reports have
indicated, teenagers involved in the rioting with no apparent
organisational link to FPI cited Rizieq’s declarations for “constitutional
jihad” and a “people’s uprising” as a literal call to arms. While FPI
leaders may apply their own version of plausible deniability, a disjuncture
was evident in the Jakarta branch’s initial claims of outside provocateurs
having been responsible for the unrest, and Rizieq’s allegation that it was
entirely due to police brutality, in response to which violent retaliation
was religiously ordained, if not obliged.

“STOP CRIMINILSATION OF ULAMA—BRING OUR GRAND IMAM BACK TO INDONESIA” reads
this banner. (Photo: author)
*Payback time*

The contradictory role and rhetoric of FPI also has much to do with timing.
FPI’s status as a legally registered social organisation, or *ormas*,
expires in mid-June. In order to gain re-registration it is required to
submit a request for consideration by the Ministry of Home Affairs, which
may approve or reject the request. Since this impending deadline became
known, there has been significant public pressure on the government to
reject any application for renewal, including an online petition signed by
over 470,000 people. As of the time of writing, FPI has yet to submit a
formal request for registration renewal. There is no shortage of evidence
spanning the organisation’s tumultuous and frequently violent 20-year
history on which to base a rejection. Conspicuous involvement in
instigating violent civil unrest would provide an obvious and popular
rationale for a rejection—hence FPI’s disavowal that it was responsible for
violence, but not a disavowal of violence itself.

To lose its *ormas* status would cast FPI into a space that it has worked
strenuously to avoid. A defining feature of FPI’s particular brand of
Islamic militancy has been its ability to straddle the ideological, legal
and political grey zone between mainstream political player and hardcore
militant organisation. This is most evident in its signature concept of
“NKRI bersyariah”, which combines the indelibility of the unitary
republic—or Negara Kesatuan Republik Indonesia (NKRI), a cornerstone of
Indonesian nationalism—with the Islamist ideal of an Indonesia governed by
Syariah and the authority of *ulama*.

The fate of FPI’s Grand Imam, Habib Rizieq Shihab which for some time hung
in the balance, now appears largely sealed. Since the beginning of his
self-imposed exile Rizieq has seen out several criminal charges against
him, all subsequently dropped. Whereas Prabowo had promised to fly Rizieq
back to Indonesia on his personal jet if he were to win the presidency,
Jokowi’s re-election will likely mean his hiatus will remain indefinite. In
case there was any ambiguity on this front, on 14 May Rizieq was issued
with a summons for questioning *over allegations of subversion*
<https://jakartaglobe.id/context/police-study-treason-allegations-against-amien-rais-rizieq-shihab-and-bachtiar-nasir>,
or *makar*.

This may see increasing stridency in Rizieq’s rhetoric as he seeks to
consolidate his position as a de facto Islamic leader forced into exile by
a tyrannical anti-Islamic regime, at the same time as FPI leaders in
country pragmatically attempt to negotiate their way through the current
political impasse.

Habib Rizieq Shihab (front, second from right) at a demonstration in 2014.
(Photo: author)
*What’s the future for FPI?*

The convergence of its impending *ormas* registration renewal deadline,
together with a decisive moment for the political alliance on which it has
staked its survival, has drawn to the surface tensions between the
disparate interests that have congregated under FPI umbrella. FPI has
historically benefitted from government crackdowns, as it provides proof
proper of its martyrdom in defence of the faith.

Many among the FPI’s ranks, however would be deeply unsettled by the
prospect of it being de-registered. This includes local clerics who have
used FPI to bolster their religious authority. Other hard-line factions
within the organisation would potentially relish the prospect of FPI
transforming into an authentically militant underground network. This could
arguably push a convergence of FPI and those already residing on the
ideological fringes, including former members of Hizbut Tahrir Indonesia,
which was banned by the Jokowi administration in 2017.

Ultimately, the events of 21–23 May exposed FPI as neither able to bring
out large, disciplined, and organised crowds on demand when most needed,
nor seemingly able to provide adequate protection from rioters—even in the
midst of the holy month of Ramadhan that it has made a name seeking to
protect. To the extent the FPI had a hand in the Jakarta riots, it appears
to have made a strategic miscalculation, as the organisation faces an
impending existential crisis.

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