http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/home/bogor-mob-attacks-ahmadi-homes-after-noon-prayers/428285

Bogor Mob Attacks Ahmadi Homes After Noon Prayers
Elisabeth Oktofani, Zaky Pawas & Ulma Haryanto | March 11, 2011



Bogor. Members of the beleaguered Ahmadiyah sect came under attack again on 
Friday when a mob vandalized four of their homes, prompting warnings by rights 
groups that the persecution of the group was worsening. 

The attack on the houses in Ciaruteun Udik village, Cibungbulang subdistrict, 
took place after Friday noon prayers. 

Bogor Police Chief Sr. Comr. Dadang Rahardjo said the incident occurred when a 
group of seven Ahmadis, two of them women, were conducting noon prayers at the 
home of an Ahmadi elder, Dayat. 

He said other residents grew suspicious of the activity and, soon after noon 
prayers at the mosque, began gathering outside the house and hurling rocks at 
it. 

"There were about 50 to 75 people, presumably locals," Dadang said. "They 
destroyed parts of the roofs and windows of four houses." He added no one was 
injured in the incident and police deployed 160 personnel to restore order. 
However, no arrests were made. 

Dadang refused to call the incident an attack, insisting it was merely a case 
of "rock throwing." 

"There was no attack, it was just some villagers throwing stones at the houses 
of Ahmadiyah followers," he said. "Not so many Ahmadis lived there, maybe 
around 10 people," he added. 

However, Firdaus Mubarik, an Ahmadiyah activist, said he had received a report 
that the local mosque had issued a call for residents to "damage the Ahmadis." 

"And it wasn't limited to throwing rocks at the houses," he said. "Some people 
reported they were chased by the attackers." 

Firdaus said the Ahmadiyah mosque in Ciaruteun Udik had previously been 
destroyed by locals in 2005, forcing the members of the minority Islamic sect 
to worship at home. "The houses of Ahmadis that are located near the main road 
are also often pelted with rocks," he said. 

Ciaruteun Udik is located two kilometers from Cisalada village in Ciampea 
subdistrict, where the homes and mosque of a community of 600 Ahmadis were 
attacked last October. 

Ismail Hasani, a researcher from the Setara Institute for Peace and Democracy, 
said it was regrettable the police had refused to recognize the attack as yet 
another incident of persecution against Ahmadiyah. 

"Rock throwing is an attack and should not be ignored," he said. "During the 
Cisalada incident, the police also called it a clash." He said the Ciaruteun 
Udik incident was a consequence of the anti-Ahmadiyah bylaws implemented in 
West Java. 

"We fear this is going to get worse," he said. 

Nurkholis Hidayat, executive director of the Jakarta Legal Aid Foundation 
(LBH), also lambasted the attack. 

"People will interpret such bylaws as a prohibition of any Ahmadiyah activity," 
he said. 

"This is an invitation to attack the Ahmadis, whatever they do." 

Last week an unidentified group of people exhumed the body of an Ahmadi in 
Bandung and left it abandoned in the graveyard shortly after his burial. 

West Java Governor Ahmad Heryawan this month announced he had issued a decree 
banning the activities of the sect in the province, following a similar move by 
the authorities in East Java to ban Ahmadiyah from openly displaying its 
attributes or spreading its faith.


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