http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/home/ministry-defends-regional-bans-on-ahmadiyah/427705

Ministry Defends Regional Bans On Ahmadiyah
Camelia Pasandaran | March 10, 2011


Not a single Ahmadi is banned by government regulations from practicing his or 
her faith, a top Home Affairs Ministry official has said, arguing instead that 
members of the sect are merely banned from spreading their beliefs. 

Ministry spokesman Reydonnyzar Moenek said on Wednesday that no regulation 
issued by local administrations or the central government to further restrict 
the activities of the minority sect was in violation of the Constitution. 

According to Chapter 2, Article 28E of the Constitution, everyone is entitled 
to have beliefs, express their opinion and act in line with their conscience. 
But so far 11 regions across the country, according to the Commission for 
Missing Persons and Victims of Violence (Kontras), have issued regulations 
banning or thoroughly restricting the activities of Ahmadiyah. 

"No law or decree issued so far has violated the Constitution." Reydonnyzar 
told reporters. "We have not restricted anybody in regard to worshipping. The 
Home Affairs Ministry will continue to evaluate existing regulations. 

"Preliminary evaluations of the regulations [in regard to Ahmadiyah] point out 
they are still within the boundaries of the law. None of them contradicts the 
Constitution or the SKB [a 2008 joint ministerial decree banning Ahmadis from 
proselytizing]." 

The joint decree, issued by the Religious Affairs Ministry, Home Affairs 
Ministry and the Attorney General's Office, stopped short of disbanding the 
sect. 

After the provincial administrations of West Java and East Java issued 
regulations banning all Ahmadiyah activity, the Jakarta administration had said 
it was studying the possibility of issuing a similar decree. However, Governor 
Fauzi Bowo has since confirmed that no decree of this nature would be issued by 
his administration. 

The Depok administration on Wednesday became the latest in the line of local 
administrations to issue a regulation restricting the activities of the 
Ahmadiyah. 

He said he would follow the instructions issued by Djoko Suyanto, the 
coordinating minister for political, legal and security affairs, who stated 
that no gubernatorial decree or regulation should violate the Constitution. 

Reydonnyzar said the Home Affairs Ministry had met with West Java Governor 
Ahmad Heryawan, who said that the province was not banning Ahmadiyah 
completely, but rather that the regulation was issued to improve the security 
of the group. 

"It is just about anticipating possible security threats," Reydonnyzar said. He 
added that none of the decrees banned the Ahmadiyah community from practicing 
their faith; they only banned members from spreading their beliefs. 

Following President Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono's call last week for a review of 
discriminatory bylaws, the Home Affairs Ministry insisted that although 
religion fell under the authority of the central government, the responsibility 
could be handed over to provincial, district or municipal governments. 

The ministry has met with representatives from the Islamic People's Forum 
(FUI), the Islamic Defenders Front (FPI), the Indonesian Council of Ulema 
(MUI), Nahdlatul Ulama and Muhammadiyah. 

"Some of them advised Ahmadiyah to stop its exclusive behavior," Reydonnyzar 
said. "They should not be closed to outsiders, as they are now, marrying only 
among their own members and being intolerant of clerics from outside 
Ahmadiyah." 

Feedback from the discussions will be used to improve the joint ministerial 
decree, he said. 

Meanwhile in Yogyakarta, 250 members of the FPI rallied outside the governor's 
office, protesting statements made by Sultan Hamengkubuwono X - the governor - 
that the activities of Ahmadiyah would not be curtailed in the province

[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]

Kirim email ke