http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/lawandorder/fpi-tasikmalayas-shariah-bylaws-are-constitutional/523326?utm_source=newsletter&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=jgnewsletter

FPI: Tasikmalaya's Shariah Bylaws Are Constitutional
Ulin Yusron | June 09, 2012
 The Islamic Defenders Front (FPI) on Friday said the West Java town of 
Tasikmalaya had a constitutional right to implement Shariah-inspired bylaws. 
(JG Photo/Boy T. Harjanto) 

Defending a plan in Tasikmalaya, West Java, to establish Shariah-inspired 
bylaws, the Islamic Defenders Front defended the constitutionality of the 
proposal on Friday and urged its implementation.

“The Jakarta Charter, the content of which is the same as the opening of the 
Constitution, stated: ‘Belief in one supreme God with mandatory Islamic Shariah 
for its believers,’ ” said Munarman, a spokesman for the organization commonly 
known as FPI. “So the implementation of Islamic Shariah is constitutional.” 

The Jakarta Charter of 1945 was adopted by the drafters of the Constitution as 
the founding document’s preamble, with some adjustments. Indonesian founding 
father M. Hatta rejected the “mandatory Islamic Shariah for its believers” 
provision, considering that many people in eastern Indonesia were not Muslims. 
All the drafters agreed to delete that part.

However Munarman, who was referring to the rejected version of the 
Constitution, said instead that banning regions from implementing Shariah was 
against the Constitution. His statement came after Home Affairs Minister 
Gamawan Fauzi prohibited the Tasikmalaya municipality from establishing Shariah 
as the implementation of the region’s 2009 bylaw on people’s life and norms 
based on Islamic teachings. Gamawan said that maintaining security and order 
was the obligation of the central government, so establishing a Shariah police 
force would go against the Regional Autonomy Law.

“Bylaws should not consist of things that are not the authority of the region,” 
Gamawan said on Friday. “So, there is no way such a bylaw will be agreed. We 
will fix it.” 

The bylaw would require women to wear headscarves outdoors and would prohibit 
unmarried men and women from being alone together.

In Indonesia, Shariah police exist only in Aceh, which has been granted special 
autonomy to conduct Islamic Shariah-based government. Enforcement by police 
there has courted controversy, including arresting punk music fans and 
patrolling the streets for people deemed to be wearing clothes that fit too 
tightly.  

BeritaSat

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